Raise statement causes immediate exit from the try block and the execution of an exception handler. The exception handler prints the argument passed by the raise statement that causes execution to occur. It's important to note that the normal flow of code is not obscured by new if-else statements.
The raise statement stops normal execution of a PL/SQL block or subprogram and transfers control to an exception handler. Raise statements can raise predefined exceptions, such as ZERO_DIVIDE or NO_DATA_FOUND, or user-defined exceptions whose names you decide. Raise statement can be applied to Procedural Language/Structured Query Language (PL/SQL)
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