The string in PL/SQL is actually a sequence of characters with an optional size specification. The characters could be numeric, letters, blank, special characters or a combination of all. PL/SQL offers three kinds of strings:
- Fixed-length strings: In such strings, programmers specify the length while declaring the string. The string is right-padded with spaces to the length so specified.
- Variable-length strings: In such strings, a maximum length up to 32,767, for the string is specified and no padding takes place.
- Character large objects (CLOBs): These are variable-length strings that can be up to 128 terabytes.
PL/SQL strings could be either variables or literals. A string literal is enclosed within quotation marks. For example,
'This is a string literal.' Or 'hello world'
To include a single quote inside a string literal, you need to type two single quotes next to one another, like:
'this isn''t what it looks like'
Declaring String Variables
Oracle database provides numerous string datatypes , like, CHAR, NCHAR, VARCHAR2, NVARCHAR2, CLOB, and NCLOB. The datatypes prefixed with an 'N' are 'national character set' datatypes, that store Unicode character data.
If you need to declare a variable-length string, you must provide the maximum length of that string. For example, the VARCHAR2 data type. The following example illustrates declaring and using some string variables:
DECLARE name varchar2(20); company varchar2(30); introduction clob; choice char(1); BEGIN name := 'John Smith'; company := 'Infotech'; introduction := ' Hello! I''m John Smith from Infotech.'; choice := 'y'; IF choice = 'y' THEN dbms_output.put_line(name); dbms_output.put_line(company); dbms_output.put_line(introduction); END IF; END; /
When the above code is executed at SQL prompt, it produces the following result:
John Smith Infotech Corporation Hello! I'm John Smith from Infotech. PL/SQL procedure successfully completed
To declare a fixed-length string, use the CHAR datatype. Here you do not have to specify a maximum length for a fixed-length variable. If you leave off the length constraint, Oracle Database automatically uses a maximum length required. So following two declarations below are identical:
red_flag CHAR(1) := 'Y'; red_flag CHAR := 'Y';
PL/SQL String Functions and Operators
PL/SQL offers the concatenation operator (||) for joining two strings. The following table provides the string functions provided by PL/SQL:
S.N. | Function & Purpose |
---|---|
1 | ASCII(x);
Returns the ASCII value of the character x.
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2 | CHR(x);
Returns the character with the ASCII value of x.
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3 | CONCAT(x, y);
Concatenates the strings x and y and return the appended string.
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4 | INITCAP(x);
Converts the initial letter of each word in x to uppercase and returns that string.
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5 | INSTR(x, find_string [, start] [, occurrence]);
Searches for find_string in x and returns the position at which it occurs.
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6 | INSTRB(x);
Returns the location of a string within another string, but returns the value in bytes.
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7 | LENGTH(x);
Returns the number of characters in x.
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8 | LENGTHB(x);
Returns the length of a character string in bytes for single byte character set.
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9 | LOWER(x);
Converts the letters in x to lowercase and returns that string.
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10 | LPAD(x, width [, pad_string]) ;
Pads x with spaces to left, to bring the total length of the string up to width characters.
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11 | LTRIM(x [, trim_string]);
Trims characters from the left of x.
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12 | NANVL(x, value);
Returns value if x matches the NaN special value (not a number), otherwise x is returned.
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13 | NLS_INITCAP(x);
Same as the INITCAP function except that it can use a different sort method as specified by NLSSORT.
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14 | NLS_LOWER(x) ;
Same as the LOWER function except that it can use a different sort method as specified by NLSSORT.
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15 | NLS_UPPER(x);
Same as the UPPER function except that it can use a different sort method as specified by NLSSORT.
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16 | NLSSORT(x);
Changes the method of sorting the characters. Must be specified before any NLS function; otherwise, the default sort will be used.
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17 | NVL(x, value);
Returns value if x is null; otherwise, x is returned.
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18 | NVL2(x, value1, value2);
Returns value1 if x is not null; if x is null, value2 is returned.
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19 | REPLACE(x, search_string, replace_string);
Searches x for search_string and replaces it with replace_string.
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20 | RPAD(x, width [, pad_string]);
Pads x to the right.
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21 | RTRIM(x [, trim_string]);
Trims x from the right.
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22 | SOUNDEX(x) ;
Returns a string containing the phonetic representation of x.
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23 | SUBSTR(x, start [, length]);
Returns a substring of x that begins at the position specified by start. An optional length for the substring may be supplied.
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24 | SUBSTRB(x);
Same as SUBSTR except the parameters are expressed in bytes instead of characters for the single-byte character systems
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25 | TRIM([trim_char FROM) x);
Trims characters from the left and right of x.
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26 | UPPER(x);
Converts the letters in x to uppercase and returns that string.
|
Example 1
DECLARE greetings varchar2(11) := 'hello world'; BEGIN dbms_output.put_line(UPPER(greetings)); dbms_output.put_line(LOWER(greetings)); dbms_output.put_line(INITCAP(greetings)); /* retrieve the first character in the string */ dbms_output.put_line ( SUBSTR (greetings, 1, 1)); /* retrieve the last character in the string */ dbms_output.put_line ( SUBSTR (greetings, -1, 1)); /* retrieve five characters, starting from the seventh position. */ dbms_output.put_line ( SUBSTR (greetings, 7, 5)); /* retrieve the remainder of the string, starting from the second position. */ dbms_output.put_line ( SUBSTR (greetings, 2)); /* find the location of the first "e" */ dbms_output.put_line ( INSTR (greetings, 'e')); END; /
When the above code is executed at SQL prompt, it produces the following result:
HELLO WORLD hello world Hello World h d World ello World 2 PL/SQL procedure successfully completed.
Example 2
DECLARE greetings varchar2(30) := '......Hello World.....'; BEGIN dbms_output.put_line(RTRIM(greetings,'.')); dbms_output.put_line(LTRIM(greetings, '.')); dbms_output.put_line(TRIM( '.' from greetings)); END; /
When the above code is executed at SQL prompt, it produces the following result:
......Hello World Hello World..... Hello World PL/SQL procedure successfully completed.
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