Execute SQL script on MySQL database
uses the database connection results = executeSQLScript(conn,scriptfile)conn to return a structure array that
contains results as a table (by default) for each executed SQL SELECT
statement in the SQL script file. For any non-SELECT SQL statements, the
corresponding table is empty. The executeSQLScript function executes
all SQL statements in the SQL script file.
specifies additional options using one or more name-value pair arguments. For example,
results = executeSQLScript(conn,scriptfile,Name,Value)'DataReturnFormat','cellarray' stores the results of an executed SQL
statement as a cell array. The results are stored in the Data field of
the results structure array.
Use the executeSQLScript function to import data into MATLAB®, especially if you have long and complex SQL queries that are difficult to
convert into MATLAB character vectors or string scalars. The
executeSQLScript function does not support SQL scripts containing
continuous PL/SQL blocks with BEGIN and END, such as
stored procedure definitions or trigger definitions. However,
executeSQLScript does support table definitions.
An SQL script containing either of the following can produce unexpected results:
Apostrophes that are not escaped, including those in comments. For example,
write the character vector 'Here's the code' as 'Here''s
the code'.
Nested comments.
An SQL script containing more than 25,000 characters causes the
executeSQLScript function to return an error.