Oracle® Database SQL Reference 10g Release 2 (10.2) Part Number B14200-02 |
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TREAT
changes the declared type of an expression.
You must have the EXECUTE
object privilege on type
to use this function.
type
must be some supertype or subtype of the declared type of expr
. If the most specific type of expr
is type
(or some subtype of type
), then TREAT
returns expr
. If the most specific type of expr
is not type
(or some subtype of type
), then TREAT
returns NULL
.
You can specify REF
only if the declared type of expr
is a REF
type.
If the declared type of expr
is a REF
to a source type of expr
, then type
must be some subtype or supertype of the source type of expr
. If the most specific type of DEREF
(expr
) is type
(or a subtype of type
), then TREAT
returns expr
. If the most specific type of DEREF
(expr
) is not type
(or a subtype of type
), then TREAT
returns NULL
.
This function does not support CLOB
data directly. However, CLOB
s can be passed in as arguments through implicit data conversion.
See Also:
"Datatype Comparison Rules" for more informationThe following statement uses the table oe.persons
, which is created in "Substitutable Table and Column Examples". That table is based on the person_t
type, which is created in "Type Hierarchy Example". The example retrieves the salary attribute of all people in the persons
table, the value being null for instances of people that are not employees.
SELECT name, TREAT(VALUE(p) AS employee_t).salary salary FROM persons p; NAME SALARY ------------------------- ---------- Bob Joe 100000 Tim 1000
You can use the TREAT
function to create an index on the subtype attributes of a substitutable column. For an example, see "Indexing on Substitutable Columns: Examples".