On Wednesday 18 October 2006 14:44, Mario Weilguni wrote:
> Am Mittwoch, 18. Oktober 2006 13:52 schrieb Andreas Joseph Krogh:
> > This has been been discussed before, but Oracle behaves differently, and
> > IMHO in a more correct way.
> >
> > The following query returns NULL in PG:
> > SELECT NULL || 'fisk';
> >
> > But in Oracle, it returns 'fisk':
> > SELECT NULL || 'fisk' FROM DUAL;
> >
> > The latter seems more logical...
>
> I've worked alot with oracle a few years ago and I agree, the feature is
> handy and makes sometimes life easier, but it's simply wrong. I heard a
> while ago that newer oracle versions changed this to sql - standard, is
> this true?
Oracle(10.1.0.4.0) still treats '' as NULL.
Why do these discussions always end in academic arguments over whats more
logical then not? From a *user's* point of view I really would like it to
treat the NULL operand of || as '', and obviously many other (at least
Oracle) users tend to agree with me on that.
On Wednesday 18 October 2006 14:42, Csaba Nagy wrote:
> And it would really return null, if aggregates wouldn't ignore the NULL
> values altogether... the null values are skipped before they get into
> the summing. The same happens with count, if you specify a column it
> will only count the ones which are not null:
If aggregates ignore NULL one could argue that so shuld the ||-operator?
--
Andreas Joseph Krogh <andreak@officenet.no>
Senior Software Developer / Manager
gpg public_key: http://dev.officenet.no/~andreak/public_key.asc
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