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Explicit Data Type Conversion Function

Explicit data type conversion is specified in terms of SQL data type definitions.

The ODBC syntax for the explicit data type conversion function does not restrict conversions. The validity of specific conversions of one data type to another data type will be determined by each driver-specific implementation. The driver will, as it translates the ODBC syntax into the native syntax, reject those conversions that, although legal in the ODBC syntax, are not supported by the data source. The ODBC function SQLGetInfo, with the conversion options (such as SQL_CONVERT_BIGINT, SQL_CONVERT_BINARY, SQL_CONVERT_INTERVAL_YEAR_MONTH, and so on), provides a way to inquire about conversions supported by the data source.

The format of the CONVERT function is:

CONVERT( value_exp, data_type)

The function returns the value specified by value_exp converted to the specified data_type, where data_type is one of the following keywords:

SQL_BIGINT
SQL_BINARY
SQL_BIT
SQL_CHAR
SQL_DATE
SQL_DECIMAL
SQL_DOUBLE
SQL_FLOAT
SQL_GUID
SQL_INTEGER
SQL_INTERVAL_DAY
SQL_INTERVAL_DAY_TO_HOUR

SQL_INTERVAL_DAY_TO_MINUTE
SQL_INTERVAL_DAY_TO_SECOND
SQL_INTERVAL_HOUR
SQL_INTERVAL_HOUR_TO_MINUTE
SQL_INTERVAL_HOUR_TO_SECOND
SQL_INTERVAL_MINUTE
SQL_INTERVAL_MINUTE_TO_SECOND
SQL_INTERVAL_MONTH
SQL_INTERVAL_SECOND
SQL_INTERVAL_YEAR
SQL_INTERVAL_YEAR_TO_MONTH
SQL_LONGVARBINARY

SQL_LONGVARCHAR
SQL_NUMERIC
SQL_REAL
SQL_SMALLINT
SQL_TIME
SQL_TIMESTAMP
SQL_TINYINT
SQL_VARBINARY
SQL_VARCHAR
SQL_WCHAR
SQL_WLONGVARCHAR
SQL_WVARCHAR

The ODBC syntax for the explicit data type conversion function does not support specification of conversion format. If specification of explicit formats is supported by the underlying data source, a driver must specify a default value or implement format specification.

The argument value_exp can be a column name, the result of another scalar function, or a numeric or string literal. For example:

{ fn CONVERT( { fn CURDATE() }, SQL_CHAR ) }  

converts the output of the CURDATE scalar function to a character string.

Because ODBC does not mandate a data type for return values from scalar functions (because the functions are often data source-specific), applications should use the CONVERT scalar function whenever possible to force data type conversion.

The following two examples illustrate the use of the CONVERT function. These examples assume the existence of a table called EMPLOYEES, with an EMPNO column of type SQL_SMALLINT and an EMPNAME column of type SQL_CHAR.

If an application specifies the following SQL statement:

SELECT EMPNO FROM EMPLOYEES WHERE {fn CONVERT(EMPNO,SQL_CHAR)} LIKE '1%'  
  • A driver for ORACLE translates the SQL statement to:

    SELECT EMPNO FROM EMPLOYEES WHERE to_char(EMPNO) LIKE '1%'  
    
  • A driver for SQL Server translates the SQL statement to:

    SELECT EMPNO FROM EMPLOYEES WHERE convert(char,EMPNO) LIKE '1%'  
    

If an application specifies the following SQL statement:

SELECT {fn ABS(EMPNO)}, {fn CONVERT(EMPNAME,SQL_SMALLINT)}  
   FROM EMPLOYEES WHERE EMPNO <> 0  
  • A driver for ORACLE translates the SQL statement to:

    SELECT abs(EMPNO), to_number(EMPNAME) FROM EMPLOYEES WHERE EMPNO <> 0  
    
  • A driver for SQL Server translates the SQL statement to:

    SELECT abs(EMPNO), convert(smallint, EMPNAME) FROM EMPLOYEES  
       WHERE EMPNO <> 0  
    
  • A driver for Ingres translates the SQL statement to:

    SELECT abs(EMPNO), int2(EMPNAME) FROM EMPLOYEES WHERE EMPNO <> 0