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oci_field_scale

(PHP 5, PHP 7, PHP 8, PECL OCI8 >= 1.1.0)

oci_field_scaleLee la escala de una columna Oracle

Descripción

oci_field_scale(resource $statement, string|int $column): int|false

Lee la escala de una columna Oracle.

Para las columnas de tipo FLOAT, la precisión no es nula, y la escala es de -127. Si la precisión es 0, entonces la columna es de tipo NUMBER. De lo contrario, es de tipo NUMBER(precision, scale).

Parámetros

statement

Un identificador de consulta OCI válido.

column

Puede ser un índice de campo (comenzando en 1) o el nombre de un campo.

Valores devueltos

Devuelve la escala, en forma de entero, o false si ocurre un error

Ejemplos

Ejemplo #1 Ejemplo con oci_field_scale()

<?php

// Creación de la tabla con:
// CREATE TABLE mytab (c1 NUMBER, c2 FLOAT, c3 NUMBER(4), c4 NUMBER(5,3));

$conn = oci_connect("hr", "hrpwd", "localhost/XE");
if (!
$conn) {
$m = oci_error();
trigger_error(htmlentities($m['message']), E_USER_ERROR);
}

$stid = oci_parse($conn, "SELECT * FROM mytab");
oci_execute($stid, OCI_DESCRIBE_ONLY); // Uso de OCI_DESCRIBE_ONLY si no se recupera ninguna fila

$ncols = oci_num_fields($stid);
for (
$i = 1; $i <= $ncols; $i++) {
echo
oci_field_name($stid, $i) . " "
. oci_field_precision($stid, $i) . " "
. oci_field_scale($stid, $i) . "<br>\n";
}

// Muestra:
// C1 0 -127
// C2 126 -127
// C3 4 0
// C4 5 3

oci_free_statement($stid);
oci_close($conn);

?>

Ver también

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User Contributed Notes 1 note

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1
VLroyrenn
7 years ago
If you're converting SQL values to their respective float and int values based on scale and precision like I am, there's a catch, here.

This is a slimmed-down version of the conversion logic I'm using :

<?php
$col
= [
'id' => $field_id,
'name' => oci_field_name($statement, $field_id),
'type' => oci_field_type($statement, $field_id),
'scale' => oci_field_scale($statement, $field_id);
'precision' => oci_field_precision($statement, $field_id);
]

$str_data = oci_result($statement, $field_id)

switch(
$col['type']) {
case
'NUMBER':
if (
$col['precision'] !== 0 && $col['scale'] === -127) {
// A binary float
$data = floatval($str_data);
} else if(
$col['scale'] === 0) {
// An integer
$data = intval($str_data);
} else {
// A fixed-point decimal number, which has no equivalent in PHP, so float
$data = floatval($str_data);
}

break;

default:
$data = $str_data;
break;
}

echo(
"{$col['name']} : $str_data ({$col['type']} ({$col['precision']}, {$col['scale']})) -> $data\n");
?>

What the doc doesn't say is that any number column that was defined without a scale parameter counts as a plain NUMBER(), which always has a precision of 0 and a scale of -127, so they get interpreted as floats even when they should be integers.

What the doc also doesn't say is that __all analytics functions that return numbers return a plain NUMBER()__, so something like COUNT(*), RANK() or FIRST_VALUE(foo) is still going to net you a float.

Be careful with these if you have any type-sensitive code that relies on those values (I'm personally very fond of using type-hinting and strict_types = 1).
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