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SQL*Plus User's Guide and Reference
Release 9.2

Part Number A90842-01
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7
Formatting SQL*Plus Reports

This chapter explains how to format your query results to produce a finished report. This chapter does not discuss HTML output, but covers the following topics:

Read this chapter while sitting at your computer and try out the examples shown. Before beginning, make sure you have access to the HR sample schema described in Chapter 1, "SQL*Plus Overview".

Formatting Columns

Through the SQL*Plus COLUMN command, you can change the column headings and reformat the column data in your query results.

Changing Column Headings

When displaying column headings, you can either use the default heading or you can change it using the COLUMN command. The following sections describe how default headings are derived and how to alter them using the COLUMN command. See the COLUMN command for more details.

Default Headings

SQL*Plus uses column or expression names as default column headings when displaying query results. Column names are often short and cryptic, however, and expressions can be hard to understand.

Changing Default Headings

You can define a more useful column heading with the HEADING clause of the COLUMN command, in the following format:

COLUMN column_name HEADING column_heading

Example 7-1 Changing a Column Heading

To produce a report from EMP_DETAILS_VIEW with new headings specified for LAST_NAME, SALARY, and COMMISSION_PCT, enter the following commands:

Keyboard icon
COLUMN LAST_NAME HEADING 'LAST NAME' COLUMN SALARY HEADING 'MONTHLY SALARY' COLUMN COMMISSION_PCT HEADING COMMISSION SELECT LAST_NAME, SALARY, COMMISSION_PCT FROM EMP_DETAILS_VIEW WHERE JOB_ID='SA_MAN' Screen icon
LAST_NAME MONTHLY SALARY COMMISSION ------------------------- -------------- ---------- Russell 14000 .4 Partners 13500 .3 Errazuriz 12000 .3 Cambrault 11000 .3 Zlotkey 10500 .2

Note:

The new headings will remain in effect until you enter different headings, reset each column's format, or exit from SQL*Plus.


To change a column heading to two or more words, enclose the new heading in single or double quotation marks when you enter the COLUMN command. To display a column heading on more than one line, use a vertical bar (|) where you want to begin a new line. (You can use a character other than a vertical bar by changing the setting of the HEADSEP variable of the SET command. See the SET command for more information.)

Example 7-2 Splitting a Column Heading

To give the columns SALARY and LAST_NAME the headings MONTHLY SALARY and LAST NAME respectively, and to split the new headings onto two lines, enter

Keyboard icon
COLUMN SALARY HEADING 'MONTHLY|SALARY' COLUMN LAST_NAME HEADING 'LAST|NAME'

Now rerun the query with the slash (/) command:

Keyboard icon
/ Screen icon
LAST MONTHLY NAME SALARY COMMISSION ------------------------- ---------- ---------- Russell 14000 .4 Partners 13500 .3 Errazuriz 12000 .3 Cambrault 11000 .3 Zlotkey 10500 .2

Example 7-3 Setting the Underline Character

To change the character used to underline headings to an equal sign and rerun the query, enter the following commands:

Keyboard icon
SET UNDERLINE = / Screen icon
LAST MONTHLY NAME SALARY COMMISSION ========================= ========== ========== Russell 14000 .4 Partners 13500 .3 Errazuriz 12000 .3 Cambrault 11000 .3 Zlotkey 10500 .2

Now change the underline character back to a dash:

Keyboard icon
SET UNDERLINE '-'

Note:

You must enclose the dash in quotation marks; otherwise, SQL*Plus interprets the dash as a hyphen indicating that you wish to continue the command on another line.


Formatting NUMBER Columns

When displaying NUMBER columns, you can either accept the SQL*Plus default display width or you can change it using the COLUMN command. The sections below describe the default display and how you can alter the default with the COLUMN command. The format model will stay in effect until you enter a new one, reset the column's format with

COLUMN column_name CLEAR

or exit from SQL*Plus.

Default Display

A NUMBER column's width equals the width of the heading or the width of the FORMAT plus one space for the sign, whichever is greater. If you do not explicitly use FORMAT, then the column's width will always be at least the value of SET NUMWIDTH.

SQL*Plus normally displays numbers with as many digits as are required for accuracy, up to a standard display width determined by the value of the NUMWIDTH variable of the SET command (normally 10). If a number is larger than the value of SET NUMWIDTH, SQL*Plus rounds the number up or down to the maximum number of characters allowed.

You can choose a different format for any NUMBER column by using a format model in a COLUMN command. A format model is a representation of the way you want the numbers in the column to appear, using 9s to represent digits.

Changing the Default Display

The COLUMN command identifies the column you want to format and the model you want to use, as shown below:

COLUMN column_name FORMAT model

Use format models to add commas, dollar signs, angle brackets (around negative values), and/or leading zeros to numbers in a given column. You can also round the values to a given number of decimal places, display minus signs to the right of negative values (instead of to the left), and display values in exponential notation.

To use more than one format model for a single column, combine the desired models in one COLUMN command (see Example 7-4). For a complete list of format models and further details, see the COLUMN command.

Example 7-4 Formatting a NUMBER Column

To display SALARY with a dollar sign, a comma, and the numeral zero instead of a blank for any zero values, enter the following command:

Keyboard icon
COLUMN SALARY FORMAT $99,990

Now rerun the current query:

Keyboard icon
/ Screen icon
LAST MONTHLY NAME SALARY COMMISSION ------------------------- -------- ---------- Russell $14,000 .4 Partners $13,500 .3 Errazuriz $12,000 .3 Cambrault $11,000 .3 Zlotkey $10,500 .2

Use a zero in your format model, as shown above, when you use other formats such as a dollar sign and wish to display a zero in place of a blank for zero values.

Formatting Datatypes

When displaying datatypes, you can either accept the SQL*Plus default display width or you can change it using the COLUMN command. The format model will stay in effect until you enter a new one, reset the column's format with

COLUMN column_name CLEAR

or exit from SQL*Plus. Datatypes, in this manual, include the following types:

Default Display

The default width of datatype columns is the width of the column in the database. The column width of a LONG, CLOB, NCLOB or XMLType defaults to the value of SET LONGCHUNKSIZE or SET LONG, whichever is the smaller,

The default width and format of unformatted DATE columns in SQL*Plus is derived from the NLS parameters in effect. Otherwise, the default format width is A9. For more information on formatting DATE columns, see the FORMAT clause of the COLUMN command.

Left justification is the default for datatypes.

Changing the Default Display

You can change the displayed width of a datatype or DATE, by using the COLUMN command with a format model consisting of the letter A (for alphanumeric) followed by a number representing the width of the column in characters.

Within the COLUMN command, identify the column you want to format and the model you want to use:

COLUMN column_name FORMAT model

If you specify a width shorter than the column heading, SQL*Plus truncates the heading. See the COLUMN command for more details.

Example 7-5 Formatting a Character Column

To set the width of the column LAST_NAME to four characters and rerun the current query, enter

Keyboard icon
COLUMN LAST_NAME FORMAT A4 / Screen icon
LAST MONTHLY NAME SALARY COMMISSION ---- -------- ---------- Russ $14,000 .4 ell Part $13,500 .3 ners Erra $12,000 .3 zuri z LAST MONTHLY NAME SALARY COMMISSION ---- -------- ---------- Camb $11,000 .3 raul t Zlot $10,500 .2 key

If the WRAP variable of the SET command is set to ON (its default value), the employee names wrap to the next line after the fourth character, as shown in Example 7-5. If WRAP is set to OFF, the names are truncated (cut off) after the fourth character.

The system variable WRAP controls all columns; you can override the setting of WRAP for a given column through the WRAPPED, WORD_WRAPPED, and TRUNCATED clauses of the COLUMN command. See the COLUMN command for more information on these clauses. You will use the WORD_WRAPPED clause of COLUMN later in this chapter.


Note:

The column heading is truncated regardless of the setting of WRAP or any COLUMN command clauses.


Now return the column to its previous format:

Keyboard icon
COLUMN LAST_NAME FORMAT A10

Example 7-6 Formatting an XMLType Column

Before illustrating how to format an XMLType column, you must create a table with an XMLType column definition, and insert some data into the table. You can create an XMLType column like any other user-defined column. To create a table containing an XMLType column, enter

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CREATE TABLE warehouses ( warehouse_id NUMBER(3), warehouse_spec SYS.XMLTYPE, warehouse_name VARCHAR2 (35), location_id NUMBER(4));

To insert a new record containing warehouse_id and warehouse_spec values into the new warehouses table, enter

Keyboard icon
INSERT into warehouses (warehouse_id, warehouse_spec) VALUES (100, sys.XMLTYPE.createXML( '<Warehouse whNo="100"> <Building>Owned</Building> </Warehouse>'));

To set the XMLType column width to 20 characters and then select the XMLType column, enter

Keyboard icon
COLUMN Building FORMAT A20 SELECT w.warehouse_spec.extract('/Warehouse/Building/text()').getStringVal() "Building" FROM warehouses w Screen icon
Building -------------------- Owned

For more information about the createXML, extract, text and getStringVal functions, and about creating and manipulating XMLType data, see Oracle9i XML API Reference - XDK and Oracle XML DB.

Copying Column Display Attributes

When you want to give more than one column the same display attributes, you can reduce the length of the commands you must enter by using the LIKE clause of the COLUMN command. The LIKE clause tells SQL*Plus to copy the display attributes of a previously defined column to the new column, except for changes made by other clauses in the same command.

Example 7-7 Copying a Column's Display Attributes

To give the column COMMISSION_PCT the same display attributes you gave to SALARY, but to specify a different heading, enter the following command:

Keyboard icon
COLUMN COMMISSION_PCT LIKE SALARY HEADING BONUS

Rerun the query:

/

Screen icon
LAST MONTHLY NAME SALARY BONUS ---------- -------- -------- Russell $14,000 $0 Partners $13,500 $0 Errazuriz $12,000 $0 Cambrault $11,000 $0 Zlotkey $10,500 $0

Listing and Resetting Column Display Attributes

To list the current display attributes for a given column, use the COLUMN command followed by the column name only, as shown below:

Keyboard icon
COLUMN column_name

To list the current display attributes for all columns, enter the COLUMN command with no column names or clauses after it:

Keyboard icon
COLUMN

To reset the display attributes for a column to their default values, use the CLEAR clause of the COLUMN command as shown below:

Keyboard icon
COLUMN column_name CLEAR

Example 7-8 Resetting Column Display Attributes to their Defaults

To reset all column display attributes to their default values, enter:

Keyboard icon
CLEAR COLUMNS Screen icon
columns cleared

Suppressing and Restoring Column Display Attributes

You can suppress and restore the display attributes you have given a specific column. To suppress a column's display attributes, enter a COLUMN command in the following form:

COLUMN column_name OFF

OFF tells SQL*Plus to use the default display attributes for the column, but does not remove the attributes you have defined through the COLUMN command. To restore the attributes you defined through COLUMN, use the ON clause:

COLUMN column_name ON

Printing a Line of Characters after Wrapped Column Values

As you have seen, by default SQL*Plus wraps column values to additional lines when the value does not fit the column width. If you want to insert a record separator (a line of characters or a blank line) after each wrapped line of output (or after every row), use the RECSEP and RECSEPCHAR variables of the SET command.

RECSEP determines when the line of characters is printed; you set RECSEP to EACH to print after every line, to WRAPPED to print after wrapped lines, and to OFF to suppress printing. The default setting of RECSEP is WRAPPED.

RECSEPCHAR sets the character printed in each line. You can set RECSEPCHAR to any character.

You may wish to wrap whole words to additional lines when a column value wraps to additional lines. To do so, use the WORD_WRAPPED clause of the COLUMN command as shown below:

COLUMN column_name WORD_WRAPPED

Example 7-9 Printing a Line of Characters after Wrapped Column Values

To print a line of dashes after each wrapped column value, enter the commands:

Keyboard icon
SET RECSEP WRAPPED SET RECSEPCHAR "-"

Finally, enter the following query:

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SELECT LAST_NAME, JOB_TITLE, CITY FROM EMP_DETAILS_VIEW WHERE SALARY>12000;

Now restrict the width of the column JOB_TITLE and tell SQL*Plus to wrap whole words to additional lines when necessary:

Keyboard icon
COLUMN JOB_TITLE FORMAT A20 WORD_WRAPPED

Run the query:

Keyboard icon
/ Screen icon
LAST_NAME JOB_TITLE CITY ------------------------- -------------------- ------------------------------ King President Seattle Kochhar Administration Vice Seattle President -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- De Haan Administration Vice Seattle President -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Russell Sales Manager Oxford Partners Sales Manager Oxford Hartstein Marketing Manager Toronto 6 rows selected.

If you set RECSEP to EACH, SQL*Plus prints a line of characters after every row (after every department, for the above example).

Before continuing, set RECSEP to OFF to suppress the printing of record separators:

Keyboard icon
SET RECSEP OFF

Clarifying Your Report with Spacing and Summary Lines

When you use an ORDER BY clause in your SQL SELECT command, rows with the same value in the ordered column (or expression) are displayed together in your output. You can make this output more useful to the user by using the SQL*Plus BREAK and COMPUTE commands to create subsets of records and add space and/or summary lines after each subset.

The column you specify in a BREAK command is called a break column. By including the break column in your ORDER BY clause, you create meaningful subsets of records in your output. You can then add formatting to the subsets within the same BREAK command, and add a summary line (containing totals, averages, and so on) by specifying the break column in a COMPUTE command.

Keyboard icon
SELECT DEPARTMENT_ID, LAST_NAME, SALARY FROM EMP_DETAILS_VIEW WHERE SALARY > 12000 ORDER BY DEPARTMENT_ID; Screen icon
DEPARTMENT_ID LAST_NAME SALARY ------------- ------------------------- ---------- 20 Hartstein 13000 80 Russell 14000 80 Partners 13500 90 King 24000 90 Kochhar 17000 90 De Haan 17000 6 rows selected.

To make this report more useful, you would use BREAK to establish DEPARTMENT_ID as the break column. Through BREAK you could suppress duplicate values in DEPARTMENT_ID and place blank lines or begin a new page between departments. You could use BREAK in conjunction with COMPUTE to calculate and print summary lines containing the total (and/or average, maximum, minimum, standard deviation, variance, or count of rows of) salary for each department and for all departments.

Suppressing Duplicate Values in Break Columns

The BREAK command suppresses duplicate values by default in the column or expression you name. Thus, to suppress the duplicate values in a column specified in an ORDER BY clause, use the BREAK command in its simplest form:

BREAK ON break_column


Note:

Whenever you specify a column or expression in a BREAK command, use an ORDER BY clause specifying the same column or expression. If you do not do this, breaks occur every time the column value changes.


Example 7-10 Suppressing Duplicate Values in a Break Column

To suppress the display of duplicate department numbers in the query results shown above, enter the following commands:

Keyboard icon
BREAK ON DEPARTMENT_ID;

For the following query (which is the current query stored in the buffer):

Keyboard icon
SELECT DEPARTMENT_ID, LAST_NAME, SALARY FROM EMP_DETAILS_VIEW WHERE SALARY > 12000 ORDER BY DEPARTMENT_ID; Screen icon
DEPARTMENT_ID LAST_NAME SALARY ------------- ------------------------- ---------- 20 Hartstein 13000 80 Russell 14000 Partners 13500 90 King 24000 Kochhar 17000 De Haan 17000 6 rows selected.

Inserting Space when a Break Column's Value Changes

You can insert blank lines or begin a new page each time the value changes in the break column. To insert n blank lines, use the BREAK command in the following form:

BREAK ON break_column SKIP n

To skip a page, use the command in this form:

BREAK ON break_column SKIP PAGE

Example 7-11 Inserting Space when a Break Column's Value Changes

To place one blank line between departments, enter the following command:

Keyboard icon
BREAK ON DEPARTMENT_ID SKIP 1

Now rerun the query:

Keyboard icon
/ Screen icon
DEPARTMENT_ID LAST_NAME SALARY ------------- ------------------------- ---------- 20 Hartstein 13000 80 Russell 14000 Partners 13500 90 King 24000 Kochhar 17000 De Haan 17000 6 rows selected.

Inserting Space after Every Row

You may wish to insert blank lines or a blank page after every row. To skip n lines after every row, use BREAK in the following form:

BREAK ON ROW SKIP n

To skip a page after every row, use

BREAK ON ROW SKIP PAGE

Note:

SKIP PAGE does not cause a physical page break character to be generated unless you have also specified NEWPAGE 0.


Using Multiple Spacing Techniques

Suppose you have more than one column in your ORDER BY clause and wish to insert space when each column's value changes. Each BREAK command you enter replaces the previous one. Thus, if you want to use different spacing techniques in one report or insert space after the value changes in more than one ordered column, you must specify multiple columns and actions in a single BREAK command.

Example 7-12 Combining Spacing Techniques

Type the following:

Keyboard icon
SELECT DEPARTMENT_ID, JOB_ID, LAST_NAME, SALARY FROM EMP_DETAILS_VIEW WHERE SALARY>12000 ORDER BY DEPARTMENT_ID, JOB_ID;

Now, to skip a page when the value of DEPARTMENT_ID changes and one line when the value of JOB_ID changes, enter the following command:

Keyboard icon
BREAK ON DEPARTMENT_ID SKIP PAGE ON JOB_ID SKIP 1

To show that SKIP PAGE has taken effect, create a TTITLE with a page number:

Keyboard icon
TTITLE COL 35 FORMAT 9 'Page:' SQL.PNO

Run the new query to see the results:

Screen icon
Page: 1 DEPARTMENT_ID JOB_ID LAST_NAME SALARY ------------- ---------- ------------------------- ---------- 20 MK_MAN Hartstein 13000 Page: 2 DEPARTMENT_ID JOB_ID LAST_NAME SALARY ------------- ---------- ------------------------- ---------- 80 SA_MAN Russell 14000 Partners 13500 Page: 3 DEPARTMENT_ID JOB_ID LAST_NAME SALARY ------------- ---------- ------------------------- ---------- 90 AD_PRES King 24000 AD_VP Kochhar 17000 De Haan 17000 6 rows selected.

Listing and Removing Break Definitions

Before continuing, turn off the top title display without changing its definition:

Keyboard icon
TTITLE OFF

You can list your current break definition by entering the BREAK command with no clauses:

Keyboard icon
BREAK

You can remove the current break definition by entering the CLEAR command with the BREAKS clause:

Keyboard icon
CLEAR BREAKS

You may wish to place the command CLEAR BREAKS at the beginning of every script to ensure that previously entered BREAK commands will not affect queries you run in a given file.

Computing Summary Lines when a Break Column's Value Changes

If you organize the rows of a report into subsets with the BREAK command, you can perform various computations on the rows in each subset. You do this with the functions of the SQL*Plus COMPUTE command. Use the BREAK and COMPUTE commands together in the following forms:

BREAK ON break_column
COMPUTE function LABEL label_name OF column column column
... ON break_column

You can include multiple break columns and actions, such as skipping lines in the BREAK command, as long as the column you name after ON in the COMPUTE command also appears after ON in the BREAK command. To include multiple break columns and actions in BREAK when using it in conjunction with COMPUTE, use these commands in the following forms:

BREAK ON break_column_1 SKIP PAGE ON break_column_2 SKIP 1
COMPUTE function LABEL label_name OF column column column
... ON break_column_2

The COMPUTE command has no effect without a corresponding BREAK command.

You can COMPUTE on NUMBER columns and, in certain cases, on all types of columns. For more information about the COMPUTE command, see Chapter 13, "SQL*Plus Command Reference".

The following table lists compute functions and their effects

Table 7-1 Compute Functions
Function Effect
SUM

Computes the sum of the values in the column.

MINIMUM

Computes the minimum value in the column.

MAXIMUM

Computes the maximum value in the column.

AVG

Computes the average of the values in the column.

STD

Computes the standard deviation of the values in the column.

VARIANCE

Computes the variance of the values in the column.

COUNT

Computes the number of non-null values in the column.

NUMBER

Computes the number of rows in the column.

The function you specify in the COMPUTE command applies to all columns you enter after OF and before ON. The computed values print on a separate line when the value of the ordered column changes.

Labels for ON REPORT and ON ROW computations appear in the first column; otherwise, they appear in the column specified in the ON clause.

You can change the compute label by using COMPUTE LABEL. If you do not define a label for the computed value, SQL*Plus prints the unabbreviated function keyword.

The compute label can be suppressed by using the NOPRINT option of the COLUMN command on the break column. See the COMPUTE command for more details. Note that if you use the NOPRINT option for the column on which the COMPUTE is being performed, the COMPUTE result is also suppressed.

Example 7-13 Computing and Printing Subtotals

To compute the total of SALARY by department, first list the current BREAK definition:

Keyboard icon
BREAK

which displays current BREAK definitions:

Screen icon
break on DEPARTMENT_ID page nodup on JOB_ID skip 1 nodup

Now enter the following COMPUTE command and run the current query:

Keyboard icon
COMPUTE SUM OF SALARY ON DEPARTMENT_ID / Screen icon
DEPARTMENT_ID JOB_ID LAST_NAME SALARY ------------- ---------- ------------------------- ---------- 20 MK_MAN Hartstein 13000 ************* ********** ---------- sum 13000 DEPARTMENT_ID JOB_ID LAST_NAME SALARY ------------- ---------- ------------------------- ---------- 80 SA_MAN Russell 14000 Partners 13500 ************* ********** ---------- sum 27500 DEPARTMENT_ID JOB_ID LAST_NAME SALARY ------------- ---------- ------------------------- ---------- 90 AD_PRES King 24000 AD_VP Kochhar 17000 De Haan 17000 ************* ********** ---------- sum 58000 6 rows selected.

To compute the sum of salaries for departments 10 and 20 without printing the compute label:

Keyboard icon
COLUMN DUMMY NOPRINT; COMPUTE SUM OF SALARY ON DUMMY; BREAK ON DUMMY SKIP 1; SELECT DEPARTMENT_ID DUMMY,DEPARTMENT_ID, LAST_NAME, SALARY FROM EMP_DETAILS_VIEW WHERE SALARY>12000 ORDER BY DEPARTMENT_ID; Screen icon
DEPARTMENT_ID LAST_NAME SALARY ------------- ------------------------- ---------- 20 Hartstein 13000 ---------- 13000 80 Russell 14000 80 Partners 13500 ---------- 27500 90 King 24000 90 Kochhar 17000 90 De Haan 17000 ---------- 58000 6 rows selected.

To compute the salaries just at the end of the report:

Keyboard icon
COLUMN DUMMY NOPRINT; COMPUTE SUM OF SALARY ON DUMMY; BREAK ON DUMMY; SELECT NULL DUMMY,DEPARTMENT_ID, LAST_NAME, SALARY FROM EMP_DETAILS_VIEW WHERE SALARY>12000 ORDER BY DEPARTMENT_ID; Screen icon
DEPARTMENT_ID LAST_NAME SALARY ------------- ------------------------- ---------- 20 Hartstein 13000 80 Russell 14000 80 Partners 13500 90 King 24000 90 Kochhar 17000 90 De Haan 17000 ---------- 98500 6 rows selected.

The format of the column SALARY controls the appearance of the sum of SALARY, as well as the individual values of SALARY. When you establish the format of a NUMBER column, you must allow for the size of the sums included in the report.

Computing Summary Lines at the End of the Report

You can calculate and print summary lines based on all values in a column by using BREAK and COMPUTE in the following forms:

BREAK ON REPORT
COMPUTE function LABEL label_name OF column column column
... ON REPORT

Example 7-14 Computing and Printing a Grand Total

To calculate and print the grand total of salaries for all sales people and change the compute label, first enter the following BREAK and COMPUTE commands:

Keyboard icon
BREAK ON REPORT COMPUTE SUM LABEL TOTAL OF SALARY ON REPORT

Next, enter and run a new query:

Keyboard icon
SELECT LAST_NAME, SALARY FROM EMP_DETAILS_VIEW WHERE JOB_ID='SA_MAN'; Screen icon
LAST_NAME SALARY ------------------------- ---------- Russell 14000 Partners 13500 Errazuriz 12000 Cambrault 11000 Zlotkey 10500 ---------- TOTAL 61000

To print a grand total (or grand average, grand maximum, and so on) in addition to subtotals (or sub-averages, and so on), include a break column and an ON REPORT clause in your BREAK command. Then, enter one COMPUTE command for the break column and another to compute ON REPORT:

BREAK ON break_column ON REPORT
COMPUTE function LABEL label_name OF column ON break_column
COMPUTE function LABEL label_name OF column ON REPORT

Computing Multiple Summary Values and Lines

You can compute and print the same type of summary value on different columns. To do so, enter a separate COMPUTE command for each column.

Example 7-15 Computing the Same Type of Summary Value on Different Columns

To print the total of salaries and commissions for all sales people, first enter the following COMPUTE command:

Keyboard icon
COMPUTE SUM OF SALARY COMMISSION_PCT ON REPORT

You do not have to enter a BREAK command; the BREAK you entered in Example 7-14 is still in effect. Now, change the first line of the select query to include COMMISSION_PCT:

Keyboard icon
1 Screen icon
1* SELECT LAST_NAME, SALARY Keyboard icon
APPEND , COMMISSION_PCT;

Finally, run the revised query to see the results:

Keyboard icon
/ Screen icon
LAST_NAME SALARY COMMISSION_PCT ------------------------- ---------- -------------- Russell 14000 .4 Partners 13500 .3 Errazuriz 12000 .3 Cambrault 11000 .3 Zlotkey 10500 .2 ---------- -------------- sum 61000 1.5

You can also print multiple summary lines on the same break column. To do so, include the function for each summary line in the COMPUTE command as follows:

COMPUTE function LABEL label_name function
  LABEL label_name function LABEL label_name ...
  OF column ON break_column

If you include multiple columns after OF and before ON, COMPUTE calculates and prints values for each column you specify.

Example 7-16 Computing Multiple Summary Lines on the Same Break Column

To compute the average and sum of salaries for the sales department, first enter the following BREAK and COMPUTE commands:

Keyboard icon
BREAK ON DEPARTMENT_ID COMPUTE AVG SUM OF SALARY ON DEPARTMENT_ID

Now, enter and run the following query:

Keyboard icon
SELECT DEPARTMENT_ID, LAST_NAME, SALARY FROM EMP_DETAILS_VIEW WHERE DEPARTMENT_ID = 30 ORDER BY DEPARTMENT_ID, SALARY; Screen icon
DEPARTMENT_ID LAST_NAME SALARY ------------- ------------------------- ---------- 30 Colmenares 2500 Himuro 2600 Tobias 2800 Baida 2900 Khoo 3100 Raphaely 11000 ************* ---------- avg 4150 sum 24900 6 rows selected.

Listing and Removing COMPUTE Definitions

You can list your current COMPUTE definitions by entering the COMPUTE command with no clauses:

Keyboard icon
COMPUTE

Example 7-17 Removing COMPUTE Definitions

To remove all COMPUTE definitions and the accompanying BREAK definition, enter the following commands:

Keyboard iconScreen icon
CLEAR BREAKS breaks cleared CLEAR COMPUTES computes cleared

You may wish to place the commands CLEAR BREAKS and CLEAR COMPUTES at the beginning of every script to ensure that previously entered BREAK and COMPUTE commands will not affect queries you run in a given file.

Defining Page and Report Titles and Dimensions

The word page refers to a screen full of information on your display or a page of a spooled (printed) report. You can place top and bottom titles on each page, set the number of lines per page, and determine the width of each line.

The word report refers to the complete results of a query. You can also place headers and footers on each report and format them in the same way as top and bottom titles on pages.

Setting the Top and Bottom Titles and Headers and Footers

As you have already seen, you can set a title to display at the top of each page of a report. You can also set a title to display at the bottom of each page. The TTITLE command defines the top title; the BTITLE command defines the bottom title.

You can also set a header and footer for each report. The REPHEADER command defines the report header; the REPFOOTER command defines the report footer.

A TTITLE, BTITLE, REPHEADER or REPFOOTER command consists of the command name followed by one or more clauses specifying a position or format and a CHAR value you wish to place in that position or give that format. You can include multiple sets of clauses and CHAR values:

TTITLE position_clause(s) char_value position_clause(s) char_value ...
BTITLE position_clause(s) char_value position_clause(s) char_value ...
REPHEADER position_clause(s) char_value position_clause(s) char_value ...
REPFOOTER position_clause(s) char_value position_clause(s) char_value ...

For descriptions of all TTITLE, BTITLE, REPHEADER and REPFOOTER clauses, see the TTITLE and REPHEADER commands in Chapter 13, "SQL*Plus Command Reference".

Example 7-18 Placing a Top and Bottom Title on a Page

To put titles at the top and bottom of each page of a report, enter

Keyboard icon
TTITLE CENTER - "ACME SALES DEPARTMENT PERSONNEL REPORT" BTITLE CENTER "COMPANY CONFIDENTIAL"

Now run the current query:

Keyboard icon
/ Screen icon
ACME SALES DEPARTMENT PERSONNEL REPORT DEPARTMENT_ID LAST_NAME SALARY ------------- ------------------------- ---------- 30 Colmenares 2500 30 Himuro 2600 30 Tobias 2800 30 Baida 2900 30 Khoo 3100 30 Raphaely 11000 COMPANY CONFIDENTIAL 6 rows selected.

Example 7-19 Placing a Header on a Report

To put a report header on a separate page, and to center it, enter

Keyboard icon
REPHEADER PAGE CENTER 'PERFECT WIDGETS'

Now run the current query:

Keyboard icon
/

which displays the following two pages of output, with the new REPHEADER displayed on the first page:

Screen icon
ACME SALES DEPARTMENT PERSONNEL REPORT PERFECT WIDGETS COMPANY CONFIDENTIAL ACME SALES DEPARTMENT PERSONNEL REPORT DEPARTMENT_ID LAST_NAME SALARY ------------- ------------------------- ---------- 30 Colmenares 2500 30 Himuro 2600 30 Tobias 2800 30 Baida 2900 30 Khoo 3100 30 Raphaely 11000 COMPANY CONFIDENTIAL 6 rows selected.

To suppress the report header without changing its definition, enter

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REPHEADER OFF

Positioning Title Elements

The report in the preceding exercises might look more attractive if you give the company name more emphasis and place the type of report and the department name on either end of a separate line. It may also help to reduce the linesize and thus center the titles more closely around the data.

You can accomplish these changes by adding some clauses to the TTITLE command and by resetting the system variable LINESIZE, as the following example shows.

You can format report headers and footers in the same way as BTITLE and TTITLE using the REPHEADER and REPFOOTER commands.

Example 7-20 Positioning Title Elements

To redisplay the personnel report with a repositioned top title, enter the following commands:

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TTITLE CENTER 'A C M E W I D G E T' SKIP 1 - CENTER ==================== SKIP 1 LEFT 'PERSONNEL REPORT' - RIGHT 'SALES DEPARTMENT' SKIP 2 SET LINESIZE 60 / Screen icon
A C M E W I D G E T ==================== PERSONNEL REPORT SALES DEPARTMENT DEPARTMENT_ID LAST_NAME SALARY ------------- ------------------------- ---------- 30 Colmenares 2500 30 Himuro 2600 30 Tobias 2800 30 Baida 2900 30 Khoo 3100 30 Raphaely 11000 COMPANY CONFIDENTIAL 6 rows selected.

The LEFT, RIGHT, and CENTER clauses place the following values at the beginning, end, and center of the line. The SKIP clause tells SQL*Plus to move down one or more lines.

Note that there is no longer any space between the last row of the results and the bottom title. The last line of the bottom title prints on the last line of the page. The amount of space between the last row of the report and the bottom title depends on the overall page size, the number of lines occupied by the top title, and the number of rows in a given page. In the above example, the top title occupies three more lines than the top title in the previous example. You will learn to set the number of lines per page later in this chapter.

To always print n blank lines before the bottom title, use the SKIP n clause at the beginning of the BTITLE command. For example, to skip one line before the bottom title in the example above, you could enter the following command:

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BTITLE SKIP 1 CENTER 'COMPANY CONFIDENTIAL'

Indenting a Title Element

You can use the COL clause in TTITLE or BTITLE to indent the title element a specific number of spaces. For example, COL 1 places the following values in the first character position, and so is equivalent to LEFT, or an indent of zero. COL 15 places the title element in the 15th character position, indenting it 14 spaces.

Example 7-21 Indenting a Title Element

To print the company name left-aligned with the report name indented five spaces on the next line, enter

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TTITLE LEFT 'ACME WIDGET' SKIP 1 - COL 6 'SALES DEPARTMENT PERSONNEL REPORT' SKIP 2

Now rerun the current query to see the results:

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/ Screen icon
ACME WIDGET SALES DEPARTMENT PERSONNEL REPORT DEPARTMENT_ID LAST_NAME SALARY ------------- ------------------------- ---------- 30 Colmenares 2500 30 Himuro 2600 30 Tobias 2800 30 Baida 2900 30 Khoo 3100 30 Raphaely 11000 COMPANY CONFIDENTIAL 6 rows selected.

Entering Long Titles

If you need to enter a title greater than 500 characters in length, you can use the SQL*Plus command DEFINE to place the text of each line of the title in a separate user variable:

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DEFINE LINE1 = 'This is the first line...' DEFINE LINE2 = 'This is the second line...' DEFINE LINE3 = 'This is the third line...'

Then, reference the variables in your TTITLE or BTITLE command as follows:

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TTITLE CENTER LINE1 SKIP 1 CENTER LINE2 SKIP 1 - CENTER LINE3

Displaying System-Maintained Values in Titles

You can display the current page number and other system-maintained values in your title by entering a system value name as a title element, for example:

TTITLE LEFT system-maintained_value_name

There are five system-maintained values you can display in titles, the most commonly used of which is SQL.PNO (the current page number). For a list of system-maintained values you can display in titles, see the TTITLE command.

Example 7-22 Displaying the Current Page Number in a Title

To display the current page number at the top of each page, along with the company name, enter the following command:

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TTITLE LEFT 'ACME WIDGET' RIGHT 'PAGE:' SQL.PNO SKIP 2

Now rerun the current query:

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/ Screen icon
ACMEWIDGET PAGE: 1 DEPARTMENT_ID LAST_NAME SALARY ------------- ------------------------- ---------- 30 Colmenares 2500 30 Himuro 2600 30 Tobias 2800 30 Baida 2900 30 Khoo 3100 30 Raphaely 11000 COMPANY CONFIDENTIAL 6 rows selected.

Note that SQL.PNO has a format ten spaces wide. You can change this format with the FORMAT clause of TTITLE (or BTITLE).

Example 7-23 Formatting a System-Maintained Value in a Title

To close up the space between the word PAGE: and the page number, reenter the TTITLE command as shown:

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TTITLE LEFT 'ACME WIDGET' RIGHT 'PAGE:' FORMAT 999 - SQL.PNO SKIP 2

Now rerun the query:

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/ Screen icon
ACME WIDGET 'PAGE:' 1 DEPARTMENT_ID LAST_NAME SALARY ------------- ------------------------- ---------- 30 Colmenares 2500 30 Himuro 2600 30 Tobias 2800 30 Baida 2900 30 Khoo 3100 30 Raphaely 11000 COMPANY CONFIDENTIAL 6 rows selected.

Listing, Suppressing, and Restoring Page Title Definitions

To list a page title definition, enter the appropriate title command with no clauses:

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TTITLE BTITLE

To suppress a title definition, enter:

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TTITLE OFF BTITLE OFF

These commands cause SQL*Plus to cease displaying titles on reports, but do not clear the current definitions of the titles. You may restore the current definitions by entering:

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TTITLE ON BTITLE ON

Displaying Column Values in Titles

You may wish to create a master/detail report that displays a changing master column value at the top of each page with the detail query results for that value below. You can reference a column value in a top title by storing the desired value in a variable and referencing the variable in a TTITLE command. Use the following form of the COLUMN command to define the variable:

COLUMN column_name NEW_VALUE variable_name

You must include the master column in an ORDER BY clause and in a BREAK command using the SKIP PAGE clause.

Example 7-24 Creating a Master/Detail Report

Suppose you want to create a report that displays two different managers' employee numbers, each at the top of a separate page, and the people reporting to the manager on the same page as the manager's employee number. First create a variable, MGRVAR, to hold the value of the current manager's employee number:

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COLUMN MANAGER_ID NEW_VALUE MGRVAR NOPRINT

Because you will only display the managers' employee numbers in the title, you do not want them to print as part of the detail. The NOPRINT clause you entered above tells SQL*Plus not to print the column MANAGER_ID.

Next, include a label and the value in your page title, enter the proper BREAK command, and suppress the bottom title from the last example:

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TTITLE LEFT 'Manager: ' MGRVAR SKIP 2 BREAK ON MANAGER_ID SKIP PAGE BTITLE OFF

Finally, enter and run the following query:

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SELECT MANAGER_ID, DEPARTMENT_ID, LAST_NAME, SALARY FROM EMP_DETAILS_VIEW WHERE MANAGER_ID IN (101, 201) ORDER BY MANAGER_ID, DEPARTMENT_ID; Screen icon
Manager: 101 DEPARTMENT_ID LAST_NAME SALARY ------------- ------------------------- ---------- 10 Whalen 4400 40 Mavris 6500 70 Baer 10000 100 Greenberg 12000 110 Higgins 12000 Manager: 201 DEPARTMENT_ID LAST_NAME SALARY ------------- ------------------------- ---------- 20 Fay 6000 6 rows selected.

If you want to print the value of a column at the bottom of the page, you can use the COLUMN command in the following form:

COLUMN column_name OLD_VALUE variable_name

SQL*Plus prints the bottom title as part of the process of breaking to a new page--after finding the new value for the master column. Therefore, if you simply referenced the NEW_VALUE of the master column, you would get the value for the next set of details. OLD_VALUE remembers the value of the master column that was in effect before the page break began.

Displaying the Current Date in Titles

You can, of course, date your reports by simply typing a value in the title. This is satisfactory for ad hoc reports, but if you want to run the same report repeatedly, you would probably prefer to have the date automatically appear when the report is run. You can do this by creating a variable to hold the current date.

To create the variable (in this example named _DATE), you can add the following commands to your SQL*Plus LOGIN file:

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BREAK ON TODAY COLUMN TODAY NEW_VALUE _DATE SELECT TO_CHAR(SYSDATE, 'fmMonth DD, YYYY') TODAY FROM DUAL; CLEAR BREAKS

When you start SQL*Plus, these commands place the value of SYSDATE (the current date) into a variable named _DATE. To display the current date, you can reference _DATE in a title as you would any other variable.

The date format model you include in the SELECT command in your LOGIN file determines the format in which SQL*Plus displays the date. See your Oracle9i SQL Reference for more information on date format models. For more information about the LOGIN file, see "Modifying Your LOGIN File".

You can also enter these commands interactively at the command prompt. For more information, see the COLUMN command.

Setting Page Dimensions

Typically, a page of a report contains the number of blank line(s) set in the NEWPAGE variable of the SET command, a top title, column headings, your query results, and a bottom title. SQL*Plus displays a report that is too long to fit on one page on several consecutive pages, each with its own titles and column headings. The amount of data SQL*Plus displays on each page depends on the current page dimensions.

The default page dimensions used by SQL*Plus are shown below:

You can change these settings to match the size of your computer screen or, for printing, the size of a sheet of paper.

You can change the page length with the system variable PAGESIZE. For example, you may wish to do so when you print a report.

To set the number of lines between the beginning of each page and the top title, use the NEWPAGE variable of the SET command:

SET NEWPAGE number_of_lines

If you set NEWPAGE to zero, SQL*Plus skips zero lines and displays and prints a formfeed character to begin a new page. On most types of computer screens, the formfeed character clears the screen and moves the cursor to the beginning of the first line. When you print a report, the formfeed character makes the printer move to the top of a new sheet of paper, even if the overall page length is less than that of the paper. If you set NEWPAGE to NONE, SQL*Plus does not print a blank line or formfeed between report pages.

To set the number of lines on a page, use the PAGESIZE variable of the SET command:

SET PAGESIZE number_of_lines

You may wish to reduce the linesize to center a title properly over your output, or you may want to increase linesize for printing on wide paper. You can change the line width using the LINESIZE variable of the SET command:

SET LINESIZE number_of_characters

Example 7-25 Setting Page Dimensions

To set the page size to 66 lines, clear the screen (or advance the printer to a new sheet of paper) at the start of each page, and set the linesize to 70, enter the following commands:

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SET PAGESIZE 66 SET NEWPAGE 0 SET LINESIZE 70

Now enter and run the following commands to see the results:

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TTITLE CENTER 'ACME WIDGET PERSONNEL REPORT' SKIP 1 - CENTER '01-JAN-2001' SKIP 2

Now run the following query:

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COLUMN FIRST_NAME HEADING 'FIRST|NAME'; COLUMN LAST_NAME HEADING 'LAST|NAME'; COLUMN SALARY HEADING 'MONTHLY|SALARY' FORMAT $99,999; SELECT DEPARTMENT_ID, FIRST_NAME, LAST_NAME, SALARY FROM EMP_DETAILS_VIEW WHERE SALARY>12000; Screen icon
ACME WIDGET PERSONNEL REPORT 01-JAN-2001 FIRST LAST MONTHLY DEPARTMENT_ID NAME NAME SALARY ------------- -------------------- ------------------------- -------- 90 Steven King $24,000 90 Neena Kochhar $17,000 90 Lex De Haan $17,000 80 John Russell $14,000 80 Karen Partners $13,500 20 Michael Hartstein $13,000 6 rows selected.

Now reset PAGESIZE, NEWPAGE, and LINESIZE to their default values:

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SET PAGESIZE 24 SET NEWPAGE 1 SET LINESIZE 80

To list the current values of these variables, use the SHOW command:

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SHOW PAGESIZE SHOW NEWPAGE SHOW LINESIZE

Through the SQL*Plus command SPOOL, you can store your query results in a file or print them on your computer's default printer.

Storing and Printing Query Results

Send your query results to a file when you want to edit them with a word processor before printing or include them in a letter, memo, or other document.

To store the results of a query in a file--and still display them on the screen--enter the SPOOL command in the following form:

SPOOL file_name

If you do not follow the filename with a period and an extension, SPOOL adds a default file extension to the filename to identify it as an output file. The default varies with the host operating system; on most hosts it is LST or LIS. See the Oracle installation and user's manual(s) provided for your operating system for more information.

SQL*Plus continues to spool information to the file until you turn spooling off, using the following form of SPOOL:

SPOOL OFF

Creating a Flat File

When moving data between different software products, it is sometimes necessary to use a "flat" file (an operating system file with no escape characters, headings, or extra characters embedded). For example, if you do not have Oracle Net, you need to create a flat file for use with SQL*Loader when moving data from Oracle8 to Oracle9i.

To create a flat file with SQL*Plus, you first must enter the following SET commands:

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SET NEWPAGE 0 SET SPACE 0 SET LINESIZE 80 SET PAGESIZE 0 SET ECHO OFF SET FEEDBACK OFF SET VERIFY OFF SET HEADING OFF SET MARKUP HTML OFF SPOOL OFF

After entering these commands, you use the SPOOL command as shown in the previous section to create the flat file.

The SET COLSEP command may be useful to delineate the columns. For more information, see the SET command.

Sending Results to a File

To store the results of a query in a file--and still display them on the screen--enter the SPOOL command in the following form:

SPOOL file_name

SQL*Plus stores all information displayed on the screen after you enter the SPOOL command in the file you specify.

Sending Results to a Printer

To print query results, spool them to a file as described in the previous section. Then, instead of using SPOOL OFF, enter the command in the following form:

SPOOL OUT

SQL*Plus stops spooling and copies the contents of the spooled file to your host computer's standard (default) printer. SPOOL OUT does not delete the spool file after printing.

Example 7-26 Sending Query Results to a Printer

To generate a final report and spool and print the results, create a script named EMPRPT containing the following commands.

First, use EDIT to create the script with your host operating system text editor.

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EDIT EMPRPT

Next, enter the following commands into the file, using your text editor:

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SPOOL TEMP CLEAR COLUMNS CLEAR BREAKS CLEAR COMPUTES COLUMN DEPARTMENT_ID HEADING DEPARTMENT COLUMN LAST_NAME HEADING 'LAST NAME' COLUMN SALARY HEADING 'MONTHLY SALARY' FORMAT $99,999 BREAK ON DEPARTMENT_ID SKIP 1 ON REPORT COMPUTE SUM OF SALARY ON DEPARTMENT_ID COMPUTE SUM OF SALARY ON REPORT SET PAGESIZE 24 SET NEWPAGE 0 SET LINESIZE 70 TTITLE CENTER 'A C M E W I D G E T' SKIP 2 - LEFT 'EMPLOYEE REPORT' RIGHT 'PAGE:' - FORMAT 999 SQL.PNO SKIP 2 BTITLE CENTER 'COMPANY CONFIDENTIAL' SELECT DEPARTMENT_ID, LAST_NAME, SALARY FROM EMP_DETAILS_VIEW WHERE SALARY>12000 ORDER BY DEPARTMENT_ID; SPOOL OFF

If you do not want to see the output on your screen, you can also add SET TERMOUT OFF to the beginning of the file and SET TERMOUT ON to the end of the file. Save and close the file in your text editor (you will automatically return to SQL*Plus). Now, run the script EMPRPT:

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@EMPRPT

SQL*Plus displays the output on your screen (unless you set TERMOUT to OFF), and spools it to the file TEMP:

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A C M E W I D G E T EMPLOYEE REPORT PAGE: 1 DEPARTMENT LAST NAME MONTHLY SALARY ---------- ------------------------- -------------- 20 Hartstein $13,000 ********** -------------- sum $13,000 80 Russell $14,000 Partners $13,500 ********** -------------- sum $27,500 90 King $24,000 Kochhar $17,000 De Haan $17,000 ********** -------------- sum $58,000 -------------- sum $98,500 COMPANY CONFIDENTIAL 6 rows selected.

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