Character Datatypes
The following are the Character Datatypes in
Oracle/PLSQL:
Data Type Syntax
|
Oracle 9i
|
Oracle 10g
|
Oracle 11g
|
Explanation
(if applicable) |
char(size)
|
Maximum
size of 2000 bytes.
|
Maximum
size of 2000 bytes.
|
Maximum
size of 2000 bytes.
|
Where size is
the number of characters to store. Fixed-length strings. Space padded.
|
nchar(size)
|
Maximum
size of 2000 bytes.
|
Maximum
size of 2000 bytes.
|
Maximum
size of 2000 bytes.
|
Where size is
the number of characters to store. Fixed-length NLS string Space padded.
|
nvarchar2(size)
|
Maximum
size of 4000 bytes.
|
Maximum
size of 4000 bytes.
|
Maximum
size of 4000 bytes.
|
Where size is
the number of characters to store. Variable-length NLS string.
|
varchar2(size)
|
Maximum
size of 4000 bytes.
Maximum
size of 32KB in PLSQL.
|
Maximum
size of 4000 bytes.
Maximum
size of 32KB in PLSQL.
|
Maximum
size of 4000 bytes.
Maximum
size of 32KB in PLSQL.
|
Where size is
the number of characters to store. Variable-length string.
|
long
|
Maximum
size of 2GB.
|
Maximum
size of 2GB.
|
Maximum
size of 2GB.
|
Variable-length
strings. (backward compatible)
|
raw
|
Maximum
size of 2000 bytes.
|
Maximum
size of 2000 bytes.
|
Maximum
size of 2000 bytes.
|
Variable-length
binary strings
|
long
raw
|
Maximum
size of 2GB.
|
Maximum
size of 2GB.
|
Maximum
size of 2GB.
|
Variable-length
binary strings. (backward compatible)
|
Numeric Datatypes
The following are the Numeric Datatypes in
Oracle/PLSQL:
Data Type Syntax
|
Oracle 9i
|
Oracle 10g
|
Oracle 11g
|
Explanation
(if applicable) |
number(p,s)
|
Precision
can range from 1 to 38.
Scale can range from -84 to 127. |
Precision
can range from 1 to 38.
Scale can range from -84 to 127. |
Precision
can range from 1 to 38.
Scale can range from -84 to 127. |
Where p is
the precision and s is the scale.
For
example, number(7,2) is a number that has 5 digits before the decimal and 2
digits after the decimal.
|
numeric(p,s)
|
Precision
can range from 1 to 38.
|
Precision
can range from 1 to 38.
|
Precision
can range from 1 to 38.
|
Where p is
the precision and s is the scale.
For
example, numeric(7,2) is a number that has 5 digits before the decimal and 2
digits after the decimal.
|
float
|
|
|
|
|
dec(p,s)
|
Precision
can range from 1 to 38.
|
Precision
can range from 1 to 38.
|
Precision
can range from 1 to 38.
|
Where p is
the precision and s is the scale.
For
example, dec(3,1) is a number that has 2 digits before the decimal and 1
digit after the decimal.
|
decimal(p,s)
|
Precision
can range from 1 to 38.
|
Precision
can range from 1 to 38.
|
Precision
can range from 1 to 38.
|
Where p is
the precision and s is the scale.
For
example, decimal(3,1) is a number that has 2 digits before the decimal and 1
digit after the decimal.
|
integer
|
|
|
|
|
int
|
|
|
|
|
smallint
|
|
|
|
|
real
|
|
|
|
|
double
precision
|
|
|
|
|
Date/Time Datatypes
The following are the Date/Time Datatypes in
Oracle/PLSQL:
Data Type Syntax
|
Oracle 9i
|
Oracle 10g
|
Oracle 11g
|
Explanation
(if applicable) |
date
|
A
date between Jan 1, 4712 BC and Dec 31, 9999 AD.
|
A
date between Jan 1, 4712 BC and Dec 31, 9999 AD.
|
A
date between Jan 1, 4712 BC and Dec 31, 9999 AD.
|
|
timestamp
(fractional seconds precision)
|
fractional
seconds precision must be a number between 0 and 9.
(default is 6)
|
fractional
seconds precision must be a number between 0 and 9.
(default is 6)
|
fractional
seconds precision must be a number between 0 and 9.
(default is 6)
|
Includes
year, month, day, hour, minute, and seconds.
For
example:
timestamp(6) |
timestamp
(fractional seconds precision) with time zone
|
fractional
seconds precision must be a number between 0 and 9.
(default is 6)
|
fractional
seconds precision must be a number between 0 and 9.
(default is 6)
|
fractional
seconds precision must be a number between 0 and 9.
(default is 6)
|
Includes
year, month, day, hour, minute, and seconds; with a time zone displacement
value.
For
example:
timestamp(5) with time zone |
timestamp
(fractional seconds precision) with local time zone
|
fractional
seconds precision must be a number between 0 and 9.
(default is 6)
|
fractional
seconds precision must be a number between 0 and 9.
(default is 6)
|
fractional
seconds precision must be a number between 0 and 9.
(default is 6)
|
Includes
year, month, day, hour, minute, and seconds; with a time zone expressed as
the session time zone.
For
example:
timestamp(4) with local time zone |
interval
year
(year precision) to month |
year
precision is
the number of digits in the year. (default is 2)
|
year
precision is
the number of digits in the year. (default is 2)
|
year
precision is
the number of digits in the year. (default is 2)
|
Time
period stored in years and months.
For
example:
interval year(4) to month |
interval
day
(day precision) to second (fractional seconds precision) |
day
precision must
be a number between 0 and 9. (default is 2)
fractional
seconds precision must be a number between 0 and 9.
(default is 6)
|
day
precision must
be a number between 0 and 9. (default is 2)
fractional
seconds precision must be a number between 0 and 9.
(default is 6)
|
day
precision must
be a number between 0 and 9. (default is 2)
fractional
seconds precision must be a number between 0 and 9.
(default is 6)
|
Time
period stored in days, hours, minutes, and seconds.
For
example:
interval day(2) to second(6) |
Large Object (LOB)
Datatypes
The following are the LOB Datatypes in
Oracle/PLSQL:
Data Type Syntax
|
Oracle 9i
|
Oracle 10g
|
Oracle 11g
|
Explanation
(if applicable) |
bfile
|
Maximum
file size of 4GB.
|
Maximum
file size of 232-1 bytes.
|
Maximum
file size of 264-1 bytes.
|
File
locators that point to a binary file on the server file system (outside the
database).
|
blob
|
Store
up to 4GB of binary data.
|
Store
up to (4 gigabytes -1) * (the value of the CHUNK parameter of LOB storage).
|
Store
up to (4 gigabytes -1) * (the value of the CHUNK parameter of LOB storage).
|
Stores
unstructured binary large objects.
|
clob
|
Store
up to 4GB of character data.
|
Store
up to (4 gigabytes -1) * (the value of the CHUNK parameter of LOB storage) of
character data.
|
Store
up to (4 gigabytes -1) * (the value of the CHUNK parameter of LOB storage) of
character data.
|
Stores
single-byte and multi-byte character data.
|
nclob
|
Store
up to 4GB of character text data.
|
Store
up to (4 gigabytes -1) * (the value of the CHUNK parameter of LOB storage) of
character text data.
|
Store
up to (4 gigabytes -1) * (the value of the CHUNK parameter of LOB storage) of
character text data.
|
Stores
unicode data.
|
Rowid Datatypes
The following are the Rowid Datatypes in
Oracle/PLSQL:
Data Type Syntax
|
Oracle 9i
|
Oracle 10g
|
Oracle 11g
|
Explanation
(if applicable) |
rowid
|
The
format of the rowid is: BBBBBBB.RRRR.FFFFF
Where
BBBBBBB is the block in the database file;
RRRR is the row in the block; FFFFF is the database file. |
The
format of the rowid is: BBBBBBB.RRRR.FFFFF
Where
BBBBBBB is the block in the database file;
RRRR is the row in the block; FFFFF is the database file. |
The
format of the rowid is: BBBBBBB.RRRR.FFFFF
Where
BBBBBBB is the block in the database file;
RRRR is the row in the block; FFFFF is the database file. |
Fixed-length
binary data. Every record in the database has a physical address or rowid.
|
urowid(size)
|
|
|
|
Universal
rowid.
Where size is
optional.
|
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