The NANVL
function is useful only for floating-point numbers of type BINARY_FLOAT
or BINARY_DOUBLE
. It instructs Oracle Database to return an alternative value n1
if the input value n2
is NaN
(not a number). If n2
is not NaN
, then Oracle returns n2
.
This function takes as arguments any numeric data type or any nonnumeric data type that can be implicitly converted to a numeric data type. Oracle determines the argument with the highest numeric precedence, implicitly converts the remaining arguments to that data type, and returns that data type.
See Also:
Table 3-10, "Implicit Type Conversion Matrix" for more information on implicit conversion, "Floating-Point Numbers" for information on binary-float comparison semantics, and "Numeric Precedence" for information on numeric precedenceUsing table float_point_demo
created for TO_BINARY_DOUBLE, insert a second entry into the table:
INSERT INTO float_point_demo VALUES (0,'NaN','NaN'); SELECT * FROM float_point_demo; DEC_NUM BIN_DOUBLE BIN_FLOAT ---------- ---------- ---------- 1234.56 1.235E+003 1.235E+003 0 Nan Nan
The following example returns bin_float
if it is a number. Otherwise, 0 is returned.
SELECT bin_float, NANVL(bin_float,0) FROM float_point_demo; BIN_FLOAT NANVL(BIN_FLOAT,0) ---------- ------------------ 1.235E+003 1.235E+003 Nan 0