DB2 cursor (update problem) this afternoon, I suddenly received the problem that the implementer sent back from the current site. One of the problems I could not find out why, this problem was not found until I searched for information online and tested the program again. The problem comes from a stored procedure of the database. Www.2cto.com Java code -- variable declaration --.... -- determine whether the cursor ends declare v_curOver integer default 0; -- declare the cursor declare c_CCDZ cursor for select nvl (COL1, '') from TABLE1 where COL2 = in_COL2; -- declare Exception Handling, this exception is triggered when the cursor ends (this sentence should be placed in the final declaration) declare continue handler for not found set v_curOver = 1; set v_curOver = 0; open c_CCDZ; CCDZLoop: loop -- Note: only fetch can cause exceptions. fetch c_CCDZ into v_COL1; if v_curOver = 1 then leave CCDZLoop; end if; update TABLE2 set COL11 = '01' where COL = v_COL1; end loop CCDZLoop; close c_CCDZ; update another table in one cursor. Because I used to write this in the query operation before, but it does not involve the addition and modification operation. At that time, I tested the general idea and tried a data randomly (I didn't expect that there was only one record of the data ), no problem. As a result, the following problem occurs: There are N records in the cursor, but an update statement is executed, and the rest is ignored. Then I checked the information online to understand the above definition, during the update operation, the cursor will jump to the end, so only the first record is updated. So I used another method. Java code declare cursor1 cursor for select T1_COL2 from TABLE1 where T1_COL1 = in_COL1; select count (1) into v_NUM from TABLE1 where partition = in_COL1; open cursor1; partition: loop fetch cursor1 into v_COL2; if v_curOver = v_NUM then leave cursorLoop1; end if; -- update TABLE2 set COL2 = '01' where COL1 = v_COL2; set v_curOver = v_curOver + 1; end loop cursorLoop1; close cursor1; in this way, you can update the data as expected. Of course, the above is just my reference to the methods I have come up with on-line materials. Here we will give you a better way to learn more! To sum up, method 1 is suitable for queries and loops are made by judging the cursor status. method 1 is suitable for updates, but you need to calculate the number of cycles by yourself.