Data type conversion reference
This topic lists type conversion rules for all data types.
Boolean type conversions
A BOOLEAN
value
is an integer value 1 or 0 and thus can be converted to/from any
other numeric type of the language.
BOOLEAN
, any value different from 0
becomes TRUE
, otherwise (zero) is
FALSE
.DEFINE hasContent BOOLEAN, s STRING
LET s = "abc"
LET hasContent = s.getLength()
When converting a string (CHAR
, VARCHAR
or
STRING
) to BOOLEAN
, the string will be converted to a number
first, then the number-to-boolean conversion applies. If the string value cannot convert to a
numeric value (for example, "abc"), the boolean value becomes NULL
.
When converting a BOOLEAN
to a string, the result will be
"1"
or "0"
string values, depending on the boolean value.
Large object type conversions
A TEXT
value can be converted to/from CHAR
,
VARCHAR
or STRING
.
The BYTE
type cannot be converted to/from any
other type.
Integers to decimal types
TINYINT
, SMALLINT
, INTEGER
and
BIGINT
values can be converted to SMALLFLOAT
,
FLOAT
, DECIMAL
or MONEY
as long as the decimal
type is defined with sufficient digits to hold the whole number.
If the integer value exceeds the range of the receiving data type, an overflow error occurs.
Decimal to integer types
SMALLFLOAT
, FLOAT
DECIMAL
or MONEY
to a TINYINT
,
SMALLINT
, INTEGER
or BIGINT
, the fractional part
of the decimal value is
truncated.MAIN
DEFINE d DECIMAL(10,2),
i INTEGER
LET d = 123.45
LET i = d
DISPLAY i -- displays 123
END MAIN
If the decimal value exceeds the range of the receiving integer data type, an overflow error occurs.
Decimal to decimal types
Converting
between SMALLFLOAT
, FLOAT
DECIMAL
or MONEY
types
is allowed as long as the receiving type is defined with sufficient
digits to hold the whole part of the original value.
MAIN
DEFINE d1 DECIMAL(10,2),
d2 DECIMAL(5,1)
LET d1 = 123.45
LET d2 = d1
DISPLAY d2 -- displays 123.5
END MAIN
Decimal to character types
Converting SMALLFLOAT
, FLOAT
, DECIMAL
or MONEY
values to CHAR
, VARCHAR
and
STRING
implies numeric formatting.
Numeric formatting is controlled by the DBMONEY and DBFORMAT environment variables.
The resulting string is left-aligned (for lossless conversions) or right-aligned (for visual conversions), depending on the conversion context; and the decimal part is kept depending on the numeric type.
MAIN
DEFINE m MONEY(8,2),
s VARCHAR(10)
LET m = 123.45
LET s = m -- Lossless conversion "$123.45"
DISPLAY m -- Visual conversion " $123.45"
END MAIN
Fixed point decimals (DECIMAL(p,s)
) are converted to strings that can fit
in a CHAR(p+2)
: The string is built with up to p significant digits + 1
character for the sign + 1 character for the decimal point. The result of a
DECIMAL(p,s)
to string conversion is never longer than p + 2 characters.
For example, a DECIMAL(5,2)
can produce "-999.99" (5 + 2 = 7c).
Floating point decimals (DECIMAL(p)
) are converted to strings that can fit
in a CHAR(p+7)
: The string is built with up to p significant digits + 1 character
for the sign + 1 character for the decimal point + the length of the exponent of needed ("e+123").
The result of a DECIMAL(p)
to string conversion is never longer than p + 7. For
example, a DECIMAL(5)
can produce "-1.2345e-123" (5 + 7 = 12c).
DECIMAL
to string conversion depends on the context in which the
conversion occurs:-
Visual conversion: The result of this conversion will typically be presented to the end
user. This conversion happens in
DISPLAY
,MESSAGE
,ERROR
,PRINT
. The result of a visual conversion is right aligned (padded with leading blanks). This padding results in the same length for any value for a given decimal precision. The length of the result is the maximum possible length as described previously (p+2 forDECIMAL(p,s)
, p+7 forDECIMAL(p)
).Visual conversion examples forDECIMAL(5,2)
:Values 1234567 ---------------------- 0 | " 0.00" -999.99 | "-999.99" 12.3 | " 12.30" 12.34 | " 12.34"
Visual conversion examples forDECIMAL(5)
:Values 123456789012 --------------------------- 0 | " 0.0" -99999 | " -99999.0" 12.3 | " 12.3" 12.34 | " 12.34" 12.345 | " 12.345" 1.23e7 | " 12300000.0" 1e100 | " 1e100"
- Form field conversion: This conversion concerns decimal numbers presented in form-fields. The result of this conversion is in best case the same as (1). The result of the conversion depends on the width of the form-field. If the width of the form-field is smaller than the perfect length, automatic rounding and exponential notation might be used.
- Lossless conversion: Such conversion happens when assigning numbers to
string variables (
LET
), passing numbers as parameters to functions expecting strings, returning numbers from functions to strings, serializing numbers (UNLOAD
, XML or JSON APIs). These conversions must avoid the loss of significant digits. When using floating point decimals, this leads to a variable length of the resulting string. A conversion must be reversible: decimal to string to decimal must give the original value. If the target variable is shorter then the maximum possible length, then automatic rounding will occur.Lossless conversion examples ofDECIMAL(5,2)
:Values 1234567 ---------------------- 0 | "0.00" -999.99 | "-999.99" 12.3 | "12.30" 12.34 | "12.34"
Lossless conversion examples ofDECIMAL(5)
:Values 123456789012 --------------------------- 0 | "0.0" -99999 | "-99999.0" 12.3 | "12.3" 12.34 | "12.34" 12.345 | "12.345" 1.23e7 | "12300000.0" 1e100 | "1e100"
DECIMAL
type. Such conversion might loose
significant digits: The runtime system tries to round the value, to fit into the target
variable. Values Different target sizes
123456 12345 1234
------------------------------------
0.98765 | "0.9877" "0.988" "0.99"
123.45 | "123.45" "123.5" "123"
DECIMAL(12)
and the target variable is a
CHAR(9)
: Values 123456789
----------------------------
1234567 | "1234567.0"
12345678 | "12345678"
123456789 | "123456789"
1234567890 | "1.2346e10"
12345678901 | "1.2346e11"
The
exponential notation will also be used if the absolute value of a floating point decimal is
less than 1e-8 (0.00000001).DECIMAL(P)
-to-string conversion must round to 2 digits, use the
fglrun.decToCharScale2
FGLPROFILE
entry:fglrun.decToCharScale2 = true
decToCharScale2
configuration parameter, unless you have migration
issues.Formatting a FLOAT
is
the same as DECIMAL(16)
. Any FLOAT
value
with up to 15 digits is exact. There is no precision loss
when converting an exact FLOAT
back and forth to/form
a string. Some FLOAT
values require 16,
in some rare cases 17 digits for an exact string representation.
16 and 17 digits are not always exact: "8.000000000000001"
and "8.000000000000002"
represent the same
float value.
Formatting a SMALLFLOAT
is
the same as DECIMAL(7)
. Any SMALLFLOAT
value
with up to 6 digits is exact. There is no precision loss when
converting an exact SMALLFLOAT
back and forth to/form
a string. Some SMALLFLOAT
values require
7, in some rare cases 8 digits for an exact string representation.
7 and 8 digits SMALLFLOAT
are not always exact:
"0.0009999901"
and "0.0009999902"
represent
the same SMALLFLOAT
value.
Character to decimal types
A CHAR
, VARCHAR
and STRING
value
can be converted to a TINYINT
, SMALLINT
, INTEGER
,
BIGINT
, SMALLFLOAT
, FLOAT
DECIMAL
or MONEY
value as long
as the character string value represents a valid number.
If the original value contains more significant digits or more fractional digits than the receiving data type supports, low-order digits are discarded.
MAIN
DEFINE d DECIMAL(10,2)
LET d = "-123.45"
DISPLAY d -- displays -123.45
LET d = "1234567890123.45"
DISPLAY d -- displays null
LET d = "12345678.999"
DISPLAY d -- displays 12345679.00
END MAIN
Date time to character types
Converting DATE
, DATETIME
and INTERVAL
values to CHAR
, VARCHAR
and STRING
implies
date time formatting.
DATE
formatting is controlled by the DBDATE environment variable.
When converting a DATETIME
to a string, the YYYY-MM-DD
hh:mm:ss.fffff
standard format is used.
When converting an INTERVAL
to a string, either YYYY-MM
or DD hh:mm:ss.fffff
standard formats are used, depending on the interval
class.
MAIN
DEFINE d DATE,
s VARCHAR(20),
v VARCHAR(5)
LET d = MDY(12,24,2012)
LET s = d
DISPLAY s -- displays 12/24/2012
LET v = d
DISPLAY v -- displays null
END MAIN
Character to date time types
Converting a CHAR
, VARCHAR
or STRING
value to
a DATE
, DATETIME
or INTERVAL
is possible
as long as the character string defines a well formatted date time or interval value.
When converting a character string to a DATE
, the string must follow the
date format defined by the DBDATE environment
variable.
When converting a string to a DATETIME
, the format must be
YYYY-MM-DD hh:mm:ss.fffff
or follow the ISO 8601 format sub-set (with the
T separator between the date and time part, and with optional UTC indicator or timezone
offset)
MAIN
DEFINE dt DATETIME YEAR TO SECOND
LET dt = "2012-12-24 11:33:45"
DISPLAY dt -- displays 2012-12-24 11:33:45
LET dt = "2012-12-24T11:33:45+01:00"
DISPLAY dt -- displays 2012-12-24 11:33:45 (if TZ=UTC+1h)
LET dt = "2012-12-24T10:33:45Z"
DISPLAY dt -- displays 2012-12-24 11:33:45 (if TZ=UTC+1h)
END MAIN
Converting DATE
to/from DATETIME
types
When converting a DATETIME
to another DATETIME
with
a different precision, truncation from the left or right can occur.
If the target type has more fields than the source type, the
year, month and day fields are filled with the current date.
When
converting a DATE
to a DATETIME
,
the datetime fields are filled with year, month and day from the
date value and time fields are set to zero.
DATETIME
to a DATE
, an implicit EXTEND(
datetime-value, YEAR TO DAY )
is performed.MAIN
DEFINE da DATE,
dt1 DATETIME YEAR TO SECOND,
dt2 DATETIME HOUR TO MINUTE
LET da = MDY(12,24,2012)
LET dt1 = da
DISPLAY dt1 -- displays 2012-12-24 00:00:00
LET dt2 = "23:45"
LET dt1 = dt2
DISPLAY dt1 -- displays <current date> 00:00:00
END MAIN
Unsupported type conversions
Other data type conversions not mentioned in this topic are not allowed and will result in a runtime error.