RETURN (Snowflake Scripting)¶
Returns the value of a specified expression.
For more information about returning values, see Returning a value.
Note
This Snowflake Scripting construct is valid only within a Snowflake Scripting block.
Syntax¶
RETURN <expression>;
Where:
expression
An expression that evaluates to the value to return.
Usage notes¶
A RETURN statement can be executed in:
A stored procedure.
An anonymous block.
A RETURN statement returns one of the following types:
A table. Use
TABLE(...)
in theRETURN
statement.If your block is in a stored procedure, you must also specify the
RETURNS TABLE...
clause in the CREATE PROCEDURE statement.Note
Currently, in the
RETURNS TABLE(...)
clause, you can’t specify GEOGRAPHY as a column type. This applies whether you are creating a stored or anonymous procedure.CREATE OR REPLACE PROCEDURE test_return_geography_table_1() RETURNS TABLE(g GEOGRAPHY) ...
WITH test_return_geography_table_1() AS PROCEDURE RETURNS TABLE(g GEOGRAPHY) ... CALL test_return_geography_table_1();
If you attempt to specify GEOGRAPHY as a column type, calling the stored procedure results in the error:
Stored procedure execution error: data type of returned table does not match expected returned table type
To work around this issue, you can omit the column arguments and types in
RETURNS TABLE()
.CREATE OR REPLACE PROCEDURE test_return_geography_table_1() RETURNS TABLE() ...
WITH test_return_geography_table_1() AS PROCEDURE RETURNS TABLE() ... CALL test_return_geography_table_1();
If you want to return the data that a RESULTSET points to, pass the RESULTSET to TABLE(…), as shown in the example below:
CREATE PROCEDURE ... RETURNS TABLE(...) ... RETURN TABLE(my_result_set); ...
You can set a variable to the return value of a stored procedure. For more information, see Using the value returned from a stored procedure call.