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Integration Services Data Types in Expressions

Applies to: SQL Server SSIS Integration Runtime in Azure Data Factory

The expression evaluator uses Integration Services data types. When data first enters a data flow in an Integration Services package, the data flow engine converts all column data to an Integration Services data type, and the column data that an expression uses already has an Integration Services data type. Expressions used in the Conditional Split and the Derived Column transformations can reference columns because they are part of a data flow that includes column data.

Variables

Expressions can also use variables. Variables have a Variant data type and the expression evaluator converts the data type of a variable from a Variant subtype to an Integration Services data type before it evaluates the expression. Variables can use only a subset of the Integration Services data types. For example, a variable cannot use a Binary Large Object Block (BLOB) data type.

For more information about Integration Services data types and the mapping of Variant data types to Integration Services data types, see Integration Services Data Types.

Literals

In addition, expressions can include string, Boolean, and numeric literals. For more information about converting numeric literals to numeric Integration Services data types, see Literals (SSIS).

Strings

You can use either DT_STR or DT_WSTR as the return type of an expression. Inside an expression, however, only DT_WSTR is supported, and DT_STR values are converted to DT_WSTR values. This behavior has several implications when you're writing an expression.

  • Inside an expression, use NULL(DT_WSTR, ...) instead of NULL(DT_STR, ...). For more info about this function, see NULL (SSIS Expression).

  • Inside an expression, you can only use the CAST function to cast a value to the DT_STR type at the root of the expression - that is, when you are returning the final result of the expression. Otherwise, use the DT_WSTR type within in expression.

Consider the expressions in the following screen shot.

String data types in SSIS expressions

  1. The first expression runs without error because the NULL(DT_STR, ...) function is at the root level of the expression.

  2. The second expression runs without error because it uses NULL(DT_WSTR, ...).

  3. The third expression raises an error because it uses NULL(DT_STR, ...) inside the expression.

  4. The fourth expression runs without error because it casts the result of NULL(DT_STR, ...) inside the expression.

    The expression evaluator handles this cast intelligently and casts to DT_WSTR, not to DT_STR, because it recognizes that the operation is not at the root level of the expression.

The following examples demonstrate the effects of casting.

Casting strings in SSIS expressions

  1. In the first expression, the cast is not at the root level of the expression. The expression evaluator handles this cast intelligently and casts to DT_WSTR, not to DT_STR. The expression returns DT_WSTR.

  2. In the second expression, the cast is at the root level of the expression. The expression returns DT_STR.

Implicit Data Conversion

An implicit conversion of a data type occurs when the expression evaluator automatically converts the data from one data type to another. For example, if a smallint is compared to an int, the smallint is implicitly converted to int before the comparison is performed.

The expression evaluator cannot perform implicit data conversion when the arguments and operands have incompatible data types. In addition, the expression evaluator cannot implicitly convert any value to a Boolean. Instead, the arguments and operands must be explicitly converted by using the cast operator. For more information, see Cast (SSIS Expression).

The following diagram shows the result type of implicit conversions of BINARY operations. The intersection of column and row in this table is the result type of a binary operation with operands of the left (From) and right (To) types.

Implicit data type conversion between data types

The intersection of a signed and an unsigned integer is a signed integer that is potentially larger than either argument.

Operators compare strings, dates, Booleans, and other data types. Before an operator compares two values, the expression evaluator performs certain implicit conversions. The expression evaluator always converts string literals to the DT_WSTR data type and converts Boolean literals to the DT_BOOL data type. The expression evaluator interprets all values enclosed in quotation marks as strings. Numeric literals are converted to one of the numeric Integration Services data types.

Note

Boolean values are logical values, not numbers. Although Boolean values may be displayed as numbers in some environments, they are not stored as numbers, and various programming languages represent Boolean values as numeric values differently, as do the .NET Framework methods.

For example, the conversion functions available in Visual Basic convert True to -1; however, the System.Convert.ToInt32 method in the .NET Framework converts True to +1. The Integration Services Expression Language converts True to -1.

To avoid errors or unexpected results, you should not write code that relies on particular numeric values for True and False. Wherever possible, you should restrict usage of Boolean variables to the logical values for which they are designed.

For more information, see the following topics:

A function that uses a single argument returns a result with the same data type as the argument, with the following exceptions:

  • DAY, MONTH, and YEAR accept a date and return an integer (DT_I4) result.

  • ISNULL accepts an expression of any SSIS data type and returns a Boolean (DT_BOOL) result.

  • SQUARE and SQRT accept a numeric expression and return a non-integral numeric (DT_R8) result.

If the arguments have the same data type, the result is of that type. The only exception is the result of a binary operation on two values with the DT_DECIMAL data type, which returns a result with the DT_NUMERIC data type.

Requirements for Data Used in Expressions

The expression evaluator supports all Integration Services data types. However, depending on the operation or the function, the operands and arguments require certain data types. The expression evaluator imposes the following data type requirements on data used in expressions:

  • Operands used in logical operations must evaluate to a Boolean. For example, ColumnA > 1&&ColumnB < 2.

  • Operands used in mathematical operations must evaluate to a numeric value. For example, 23.75 * 4.

  • Operands used in comparison operations, such as logical and equality operations, must evaluate to compatible data types.

    For example, one of the expressions in the following example uses the DT_DBTIMESTAMPOFFSET data type:

    (DT_DBTIMESTAMPOFFSET,3) "1999-10-11 20:34:52.123 -3:30" != (DT_DBDATE)"1999-10-12"

    The system converts the expression, (DT_DBDATE)"1999-10-12", to DT_DBTIMESTAMPOFFSET. The example evaluates to TRUE because the converted expression becomes "1999-10-12 00:00:00.000 +00:00", which is not equal to the value of the other expression, (DT_DBTIMESTAMPOFFSET,3) "1999-10-11 20:34:52.123 -3:30".

  • Arguments passed to mathematical functions must evaluate to a numeric data type. Depending on the function or operation, a specific numeric data type may be required. For example, the HEX function requires a signed or unsigned integer.

  • Arguments passed to string functions must evaluate to a character data type: DT_STR or DT_WSTR. For example, UPPER("flower"). Some string functions, such as SUBSTRING, require additional integer arguments for the start position and the length of the string.

  • Arguments passed to date and time functions must evaluate to a valid date. For example, DAY(GETDATE()). Some functions, such as DATEADD, require an additional integer argument for the number of days the function adds to a date.

Operations that combine an unsigned eight-byte integer and a signed integer require an explicit cast to clarify the result format. For more information, see Cast (SSIS Expression).

Results of many operations and functions have predetermined data types. This can be the data type of the argument or the data type to which the expression evaluator casts the result. For example, the result of a logical OR operator (||) is always a Boolean, the result of the ABS function is the numeric data type of the argument, and the result of multiplication is the smallest numeric data type that can hold the result without loss. For more information about the data types of results, see Operators (SSIS Expression) and Functions (SSIS Expression).

Use an Expression in a Data Flow Component