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I have a bunch of stored procedures that look like something this CREATE PROCEDURE example() BEGIN UPDATE STATEMENT A; UPDATE STATEMENT B; UPDATE STATEMENT C; END// When I run them thr...
#3: Post edited
I have a bunch of stored procedures that look like something this ``` CREATE PROCEDURE example() BEGIN UPDATE STATEMENT A; UPDATE STATEMENT B; UPDATE STATEMENT C; END// ``` When I run them through MySQLWorkbench after it completes they will return a response of, ``` 5 row(s) affected ``` However that is only the count for the rows updated by the last statement, not all of the rows effected by the stored procedure. Is there a way to write the stored procedure so that the number of rows effected will be the total number of rows instead of just the last update?
#2: Post edited
In a stored procedure, is it possible to get the total number or rows updated?
- In a stored procedure, is it possible to get the total number or rows updated by different statements?
#1: Initial revision
In a stored procedure, is it possible to get the total number or rows updated?
I have a bunch of stored procedures that look like something this ``` CREATE PROCEDURE example() BEGIN UPDATE STATEMENT A; UPDATE STATEMENT B; UPDATE STATEMENT C; END// ``` When I run them through MySQLWorkbench after it completes they will return a response of, ``` 5 row(s) affected ``` However that is only the count for the rows updated by the last statement, not all of the rows effected by the stored procedure. Is there a way to write the stored procedure so that the number of rows effected will be the total number of rows instead of just the last update?