Display formats
The display format (sometimes referred to as an end-user format) is the format in which data is displayed, and it differs from the internal format that is used to store the data in the database.
Display formats for data types
The
database server stores data for DATE, DATETIME, MONEY, and numeric
data types in compact internal formats within the database. For example,
the database server stores a DATE value as an integer number of days
since December 31, 1899, so the date 03/19/96
is 35142
.
HCL® OneDB® products support display formats so that a client application can present internal formats in a form that is meaningful to the user. Literal strings or character variables can display in SQL statements as column values or as arguments of SQL API library functions.
- When the HCL OneDB product reads a string,
it uses a display format to determine how to interpret the string so that it can convert it to a
numeric value. For example, suppose that DB-Access has the default (US English) as its client locale. The literal date in the following INSERT statement uses the display format for dates that the default locale defines:
INSERT INTO mytab ( date1 ) VALUES ( '03/19/96' )
When it receives the data from the client application, the database server uses the display format to interpret this literal date so that it can convert it to the corresponding internal format (
35142
). - When the HCL OneDB product prints a string,
it uses a display format to determine how to format the numeric value as a string.
For example, suppose that the client application has a French locale as its client locale, and this locale defines a date display format that formats dates as
dd/mm/yy
. The following rdatestr() function uses the display format for dates to obtain the value in the datestr character variable:err = rdatestr(jdate, datestr);
The rdatestr() function uses the display format to determine how to format the internal format (
35142
) as a date string before it puts the value in the datestr variable.
- Representation of currency notation and numeric format
- Representation of dates and of time-of-day values
Data types | Environment variables | Locale category |
---|---|---|
DATE | GL_DATE | TIME |
DATETIME INTERVAL |
GL_DATE GL_DATETIME |
TIME |
MONEY | DBMONEY | MONETARY |
Number (DEC, DECIMAL, DOUBLE PRECISION, FLOAT, INT, INT8, INTEGER, NUMERIC, REAL, SMALLFLOAT, SMALLINT) | None | NUMERIC |
Display widths for Unicode private-use characters
By default, DB-Access and other HCL OneDB character-based applications cannot interpret private-use characters.
You must use the IFX_PUA_DISPLAY_MAPPING environment variable to set display widths for characters from the Unicode Private-Use Area (PUA) ranges according to a mapping file that you supply: $INFORMIXIDR/gls/etc/pua.map.