Oracle® Database Globalization Support Guide 10g Release 2 (10.2) Part Number B14225-02 |
|
|
View PDF |
This chapter tells how to set up a globalization support environment. It includes the following topics:
NLS (National Language Support) parameters determine the locale-specific behavior on both the client and the server. NLS parameters can be specified in the following ways:
As initialization parameters on the server
You can include parameters in the initialization parameter file to specify a default session NLS environment. These settings have no effect on the client side; they control only the server's behavior. For example:
NLS_TERRITORY = "CZECH REPUBLIC"
As environment variables on the client
You can use NLS environment variables, which may be platform-dependent, to specify locale-dependent behavior for the client and also to override the default values set for the session in the initialization parameter file. For example, on a UNIX system:
% setenv NLS_SORT FRENCH
With the ALTER SESSION
statement
You can use NLS parameters that are set in an ALTER
SESSION
statement to override the default values that are set for the session in the initialization parameter file or set by the client with environment variables.
ALTER SESSION SET NLS_SORT = FRENCH;
In SQL functions
You can use NLS parameters explicitly to hardcode NLS behavior within a SQL function. This practice overrides the default values that are set for the session in the initialization parameter file, set for the client with environment variables, or set for the session by the ALTER
SESSION
statement. For example:
TO_CHAR(hiredate, 'DD/MON/YYYY', 'nls_date_language = FRENCH')
See Also: Oracle Database SQL Reference for more information about SQL functions, including theTO_CHAR function |
Table 3-1 shows the precedence order of the different methods of setting NLS parameters. Higher priority settings override lower priority settings. For example, a default value has the lowest priority and can be overridden by any other method.
Table 3-1 Methods of Setting NLS Parameters and Their Priorities
Priority | Method |
---|---|
1 (highest) |
Explicitly set in SQL functions |
2 |
Set by an |
3 |
Set as an environment variable |
4 |
Specified in the initialization parameter file |
5 |
Default |
Table 3-2 lists the available NLS parameters. Because the SQL function NLS parameters can be specified only with specific functions, the table does not show the SQL function scope.
Table 3-2 NLS Parameters
Parameter | Description | Default | Scope:I = Initialization Parameter File E = Environment Variable A = ALTER SESSION |
---|---|---|---|
|
Calendar system |
Gregorian |
I, E, A |
|
SQL, PL/SQL operator comparison |
|
I, E, A |
|
Credit accounting symbol |
Derived from |
E |
|
Local currency symbol |
Derived from |
I, E, A |
|
Date format |
Derived from |
I, E, A |
|
Language for day and month names |
Derived from |
I, E, A |
|
Debit accounting symbol |
Derived from |
E |
|
ISO international currency symbol |
Derived from |
I, E, A |
See Also: "Choosing a Locale with the NLS_LANG Environment Variable" |
Language, territory, character set |
|
E |
|
Language |
Derived from |
I, A |
|
How strings are treated |
|
I, E, A |
|
Character that separates items in a list |
Derived from |
E |
|
Monetary symbol for dollar and cents (or their equivalents) |
Derived from |
E |
|
Reports data loss during a character type conversion |
|
I, A |
|
Decimal character and group separator |
Derived from |
I, E, A |
|
Character sort sequence |
Derived from |
I, E, A |
|
Territory |
Derived from |
I, A |
|
Timestamp |
Derived from |
I, E, A |
|
Timestamp with time zone |
Derived from |
I, E, A |
|
Dual currency symbol |
Derived from |
I, E, A |
A locale is a linguistic and cultural environment in which a system or program is running. Setting the NLS_LANG
environment parameter is the simplest way to specify locale behavior for Oracle software. It sets the language and territory used by the client application and the database server. It also sets the client's character set, which is the character set for data entered or displayed by a client program.
NLS_LANG
is set as an environment variable on UNIX platforms. NLS_LANG
is set in the registry on Windows platforms.
The NLS_LANG
parameter has three components: language, territory, and character set. Specify it in the following format, including the punctuation:
NLS_LANG = language_territory.charset
For example, if the Oracle Installer does not populate NLS_LANG
, then its value by default is AMERICAN_AMERICA.US7ASCII
. The language is AMERICAN
, the territory is AMERICA
, and the character set is US7ASCII
. The values in NLS_LANG
and other NLS parameters are case-insensitive.
Each component of the NLS_LANG
parameter controls the operation of a subset of globalization support features:
language
Specifies conventions such as the language used for Oracle messages, sorting, day names, and month names. Each supported language has a unique name; for example, AMERICAN
, FRENCH
, or GERMAN
. The language argument specifies default values for the territory and character set arguments. If the language is not specified, then the value defaults to AMERICAN
.
territory
Specifies conventions such as the default date, monetary, and numeric formats. Each supported territory has a unique name; for example, AMERICA
, FRANCE
, or CANADA
. If the territory is not specified, then the value is derived from the language value.
charset
Specifies the character set used by the client application (normally the Oracle character set that corresponds to the user's terminal character set or the OS character set). Each supported character set has a unique acronym, for example, US7ASCII
, WE8ISO8859P1
, WE8DEC
, WE8MSWIN1252
, or JA16EUC
. Each language has a default character set associated with it.
Note: All components of theNLS_LANG definition are optional; any item that is not specified uses its default value. If you specify territory or character set, then you must include the preceding delimiter [underscore (_) for territory, period (.) for character set]. Otherwise, the value is parsed as a language name.
For example, to set only the territory portion of |
The three components of NLS_LANG
can be specified in many combinations, as in the following examples:
NLS_LANG = AMERICAN_AMERICA.WE8MSWIN1252 NLS_LANG = FRENCH_CANADA.WE8ISO8859P1 NLS_LANG = JAPANESE_JAPAN.JA16EUC
Note that illogical combinations can be set but do not work properly. For example, the following specification tries to support Japanese by using a Western European character set:
NLS_LANG = JAPANESE_JAPAN.WE8ISO8859P1
Because the WE8ISO8859P1 character set does not support any Japanese characters, you cannot store or display Japanese data if you use this definition for NLS_LANG
.
The rest of this section includes the following topics:
See Also:
|
In a UNIX operating system C-shell session, you can specify the value of NLS_LANG
by entering a statement similar to the following:
% setenv NLS_LANG FRENCH_FRANCE.WE8ISO8859P1
Because NLS_LANG
is an environment variable, it is read by the client application at startup time. The client communicates the information defined by NLS_LANG
to the server when it connects to the database server.
The following examples show how date and number formats are affected by the NLS_LANG
parameter.
Example 3-1 Setting NLS_LANG to American_America.WE8ISO8859P1
Set NLS_LANG
so that the language is AMERICAN
, the territory is AMERICA
, and the Oracle character set is WE8ISO8859P1
:
% setenv NLS_LANG American_America.WE8ISO8859P1
Enter a SELECT
statement:
SQL> SELECT last_name, hire_date, ROUND(salary/8,2) salary FROM employees;
You should see results similar to the following:
LAST_NAME HIRE_DATE SALARY ------------------------- --------- ---------- Sciarra 30-SEP-97 962.5 Urman 07-MAR-98 975 Popp 07-DEC-99 862.5
Example 3-2 Setting NLS_LANG to French_France.WE8ISO8859P1
Set NLS_LANG
so that the language is FRENCH
, the territory is FRANCE
, and the Oracle character set is WE8ISO8859P1
:
% setenv NLS_LANG French_France.WE8ISO8859P1
Then the query shown in Example 3-1 returns the following output:
LAST_NAME HIRE_DAT SALARY ------------------------- -------- ---------- Sciarra 30/09/97 962,5 Urman 07/03/98 975 Popp 07/12/99 862,5
Note that the date format and the number format have changed. The numbers have not changed, because the underlying data is the same.
The NLS_LANG
parameter sets the language and territory environment used by both the server session (for example, SQL command execution) and the client application (for example, display formatting in Oracle tools). Using this parameter ensures that the language environments of both the database and the client application are automatically the same.
The language and territory components of the NLS_LANG
parameter determine the default values for other detailed NLS parameters, such as date format, numeric characters, and linguistic sorting. Each of these detailed parameters can be set in the client environment to override the default values if the NLS_LANG
parameter has already been set.
If the NLS_LANG
parameter is not set, then the server session environment remains initialized with values of NLS_LANGUAGE
, NLS_TERRITORY
, and other NLS instance parameters from the initialization parameter file. You can modify these parameters and restart the instance to change the defaults.
You might want to modify the NLS environment dynamically during the session. To do so, you can use the ALTER
SESSION
statement to change NLS_LANGUAGE
, NLS_TERRITORY
, and other NLS parameters.
Note: You cannot modify the setting for the client character set with theALTER SESSION statement. |
The ALTER
SESSION
statement modifies only the session environment. The local client NLS environment is not modified, unless the client explicitly retrieves the new settings and modifies its local environment.
Before Oracle Database 10g, Oracle defined language and territory definitions separately. This resulted in the definition of a territory being independent of the language setting of the user. In Oracle Database 10g, some territories can have different date, time, number, and monetary formats based on the language setting of a user. This type of language-dependent territory definition is called a locale variant.
For the variant to work properly, both NLS_TERRITORY
and NLS_LANGUAGE
must be specified.
Table 3-3 shows the territories that have been enhanced to support variations.
Table 3-3 Oracle Locale Variants
Oracle Territory | Oracle Language |
---|---|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
The NLS_LANG
character set should reflect the setting of the operating system character set of the client. For example, if the database character set is AL32UTF8 and the client is running on a Windows operating system, then you should not set AL32UTF8 as the client character set in the NLS_LANG
parameter because there are no UTF-8 WIN32 clients. Instead, the NLS_LANG
setting should reflect the code page of the client. For example, on an English Windows client, the code page is 1252. An appropriate setting for NLS_LANG
is AMERICAN_AMERICA.WE8MSWIN1252
.
Setting NLS_LANG
correctly allows proper conversion from the client operating system character set to the database character set. When these settings are the same, Oracle assumes that the data being sent or received is encoded in the same character set as the database character set, so character set validation or conversion may not be performed. This can lead to corrupt data if the client code page and the database character set are different and conversions are necessary.
See Also: Oracle Database Installation Guide for 32-Bit Windows for more information about commonly used values of theNLS_LANG parameter in Windows |
When a new database is created during the execution of the CREATE
DATABASE
statement, the NLS-related database configuration is established. The current NLS instance parameters are stored in the data dictionary along with the database and national character sets. The NLS instance parameters are read from the initialization parameter file at instance startup.
You can find the values for NLS parameters by using:
Applications can check the session, instance, and database NLS parameters by querying the following data dictionary views:
NLS_SESSION_PARAMETERS
shows the NLS parameters and their values for the session that is querying the view. It does not show information about the character set.
NLS_INSTANCE_PARAMETERS
shows the current NLS instance parameters that have been explicitly set and the values of the NLS instance parameters.
NLS_DATABASE_PARAMETERS
shows the values of the NLS parameters for the database. The values are stored in the database.
Applications can check the following NLS dynamic performance views:
V$NLS_VALID_VALUES
lists values for the following NLS parameters: NLS_LANGUAGE
, NLS_SORT
, NLS_TERRITORY,
NLS_CHARACTERSET
V$NLS_PARAMETERS
shows current values of the following NLS parameters: NLS_CALENDAR
, NLS_CHARACTERSET
, NLS_CURRENCY
, NLS_DATE_FORMAT
, NLS_DATE_LANGUAGE
, NLS_ISO_CURRENCY
, NLS_LANGUAGE
, NLS_NUMERIC_CHARACTERS
, NLS_SORT
, NLS_TERRITORY
, NLS_NCHAR_CHARACTERSET
, NLS_COMP
, NLS_LENGTH_SEMANTICS
, NLS_NCHAR_CONV_EXP
, NLS_TIMESTAMP_FORMAT
, NLS_TIMESTAMP_TZ_FORMAT
, NLS_TIME_FORMAT
, NLS_TIME_TZ_FORMAT
This section contains information about the following parameters:
Property | Description |
---|---|
Parameter type | String |
Parameter scope | Initialization parameter and ALTER SESSION |
Default value | Derived from NLS_LANG |
Range of values | Any valid language name |
NLS_LANGUAGE
specifies the default conventions for the following session characteristics:
Language for server messages
Language for day and month names and their abbreviations (specified in the SQL functions TO_CHAR
and TO_DATE
)
Symbols for equivalents of AM, PM, AD, and BC. (A.M., P.M., A.D., and B.C. are valid only if NLS_LANGUAGE
is set to AMERICAN
.)
Default sorting sequence for character data when ORDER
BY
is specified. (GROUP BY
uses a binary sort unless ORDER
BY
is specified.)
Writing direction
Affirmative and negative response strings (for example, YES
and NO
)
The value specified for NLS_LANGUAGE
in the initialization parameter file is the default for all sessions in that instance. For example, to specify the default session language as French, the parameter should be set as follows:
NLS_LANGUAGE = FRENCH
Consider the following server message:
ORA-00942: table or view does not exist
When the language is French, the server message appears as follows:
ORA-00942: table ou vue inexistante
Messages used by the server are stored in binary-format files that are placed in the $ORACLE_HOME/
product_name
/mesg
directory, or the equivalent for your operating system. Multiple versions of these files can exist, one for each supported language, using the following filename convention:
<product_id><language_abbrev>.MSB
For example, the file containing the server messages in French is called oraf.msb
, because ORA
is the product ID (<product_id>
) and F
is the language abbreviation (<language_abbrev>
) for French. The product_name
is rdbms
, so it is in the $ORACLE_HOME/rdbms/mesg
directory.
If NLS_LANG
is specified in the client environment, then the value of NLS_LANGUAGE
in the initialization parameter file is overridden at connection time.
Messages are stored in these files in one specific character set, depending on the language and the operating system. If this character set is different from the database character set, then message text is automatically converted to the database character set. If necessary, it is then converted to the client character set if the client character set is different from the database character set. Hence, messages are displayed correctly at the user's terminal, subject to the limitations of character set conversion.
The language-specific binary message files that are actually installed depend on the languages that the user specifies during product installation. Only the English binary message file and the language-specific binary message files specified by the user are installed.
The default value of NLS_LANGUAGE
may be specific to the operating system. You can alter the NLS_LANGUAGE
parameter by changing its value in the initialization parameter file and then restarting the instance.
See Also: Your operating system-specific Oracle documentation for more information about the default value ofNLS_LANGUAGE |
All messages and text should be in the same language. For example, when you run an Oracle Developer application, the messages and boilerplate text that you see originate from three sources:
Messages from the server
Messages and boilerplate text generated by Oracle Forms
Messages and boilerplate text generated by the application
NLS_LANGUAGE
determines the language used for the first two kinds of text. The application is responsible for the language used in its messages and boilerplate text.
The following examples show behavior that results from setting NLS_LANGUAGE
to different values.
Example 3-3 NLS_LANGUAGE=ITALIAN
Use the ALTER SESSION
statement to set NLS_LANGUAGE
to Italian:
ALTER SESSION SET NLS_LANGUAGE=Italian;
Enter a SELECT
statement:
SQL> SELECT last_name, hire_date, ROUND(salary/8,2) salary FROM employees;
You should see results similar to the following:
LAST_NAME HIRE_DATE SALARY ------------------------- --------- ---------- Sciarra 30-SET-97 962.5 Urman 07-MAR-98 975 Popp 07-DIC-99 862.5
Note that the month name abbreviations are in Italian.
See Also: "Overriding Default Values for NLS_LANGUAGE and NLS_TERRITORY During a Session" for more information about using theALTER SESSION statement |
Example 3-4 NLS_LANGUAGE=GERMAN
Use the ALTER SESSION
statement to change the language to German:
SQL> ALTER SESSION SET NLS_LANGUAGE=German;
Enter the same SELECT
statement:
SQL> SELECT last_name, hire_date, ROUND(salary/8,2) salary FROM employees;
You should see results similar to the following:
LAST_NAME HIRE_DATE SALARY ------------------------- --------- ---------- Sciarra 30-SEP-97 962.5 Urman 07-MÄR-98 975 Popp 07-DEZ-99 862.5
Note that the language of the month abbreviations has changed.
Property | Description |
---|---|
Parameter type | String |
Parameter scope | Initialization parameter and ALTER SESSION |
Default value | Derived from NLS_LANG |
Range of values | Any valid territory name |
NLS_TERRITORY
specifies the conventions for the following default date and numeric formatting characteristics:
Date format
Decimal character and group separator
Local currency symbol
ISO currency symbol
Dual currency symbol
First day of the week
Credit and debit symbols
ISO week flag
List separator
The value specified for NLS_TERRITORY
in the initialization parameter file is the default for the instance. For example, to specify the default as France, the parameter should be set as follows:
NLS_TERRITORY = FRANCE
When the territory is FRANCE
, numbers are formatted using a comma as the decimal character.
You can alter the NLS_TERRITORY
parameter by changing the value in the initialization parameter file and then restarting the instance. The default value of NLS_TERRITORY
can be specific to the operating system.
If NLS_LANG
is specified in the client environment, then the value of NLS_TERRITORY
in the initialization parameter file is overridden at connection time.
The territory can be modified dynamically during the session by specifying the new NLS_TERRITORY
value in an ALTER
SESSION
statement. Modifying NLS_TERRITORY
resets all derived NLS session parameters to default values for the new territory.
To change the territory to France during a session, issue the following ALTER SESSION
statement:
ALTER SESSION SET NLS_TERRITORY = France;
The following examples show behavior that results from different settings of NLS_TERRITORY
and NLS_LANGUAGE
.
Example 3-5 NLS_LANGUAGE=AMERICAN, NLS_TERRITORY=AMERICA
Enter the following SELECT
statement:
SQL> SELECT TO_CHAR(salary,'L99G999D99') salary FROM employees;
When NLS_TERRITORY
is set to AMERICA
and NLS_LANGUAGE
is set to AMERICAN
, results similar to the following should appear:
SALARY -------------------- $24,000.00 $17,000.00 $17,000.00
Example 3-6 NLS_LANGUAGE=AMERICAN, NLS_TERRITORY=GERMANY
Use an ALTER SESSION
statement to change the territory to Germany:
ALTER SESSION SET NLS_TERRITORY = Germany; Session altered.
Enter the same SELECT
statement as before:
SQL> SELECT TO_CHAR(salary,'L99G999D99') salary FROM employees;
You should see results similar to the following:
SALARY -------------------- €24.000,00 €17.000,00 €17.000,00
Note that the currency symbol has changed from $
to €. The numbers have not changed because the underlying data is the same.
See Also: "Overriding Default Values for NLS_LANGUAGE and NLS_TERRITORY During a Session" for more information about using theALTER SESSION statement |
Example 3-7 NLS_LANGUAGE=GERMAN, NLS_TERRITORY=GERMANY
Use an ALTER SESSION
statement to change the language to German:
ALTER SESSION SET NLS_LANGUAGE = German; Sitzung wurde geändert.
Note that the server message now appears in German.
Enter the same SELECT
statement as before:
SQL> SELECT TO_CHAR(salary,'L99G999D99') salary FROM employees;
You should see the same results as in Example 3-6:
SALARY -------------------- €24.000,00 €17.000,00 €17.000,00
Example 3-8 NLS_LANGUAGE=GERMAN, NLS_TERRITORY=AMERICA
Use an ALTER SESSION
statement to change the territory to America:
ALTER SESSION SET NLS_TERRITORY = America; Sitzung wurde geändert.
Enter the same SELECT
statement as in the other examples:
SQL> SELECT TO_CHAR(salary,'L99G999D99') salary FROM employees;
You should see output similar to the following:
SALARY -------------------- $24,000.00 $17,000.00 $17,000.00
Note that the currency symbol changed from € to $
because the territory changed from Germany to America.
Default values for NLS_LANGUAGE
and NLS_TERRITORY
and default values for specific formatting parameters can be overridden during a session by using the ALTER
SESSION
statement.
Example 3-9 NLS_LANG=ITALIAN_ITALY.WE8DEC
Set the NLS_LANG
environment variable so that the language is Italian, the territory is Italy, and the character set is WE8DEC:
% setenv NLS_LANG Italian_Italy.WE8DEC
Enter a SELECT
statement:
SQL> SELECT last_name, hire_date, ROUND(salary/8,2) salary FROM employees;
You should see output similar to the following:
LAST_NAME HIRE_DATE SALARY ------------------------- --------- ---------- Sciarra 30-SET-97 962,5 Urman 07-MAR-98 975 Popp 07-DIC-99 862,5
Note the language of the month abbreviations and the decimal character.
Example 3-10 Change Language, Date Format, and Decimal Character
Use ALTER SESSION
statements to change the language, the date format, and the decimal character:
SQL> ALTER SESSION SET NLS_LANGUAGE=german; Session wurde geändert. SQL> ALTER SESSION SET NLS_DATE_FORMAT='DD.MON.YY'; Session wurde geändert. SQL> ALTER SESSION SET NLS_NUMERIC_CHARACTERS='.,'; Session wurde geändert.
Enter the SELECT
statement shown in Example 3-9:
SQL> SELECT last_name, hire_date, ROUND(salary/8,2) salary FROM employees;
You should see output similar to the following:
LAST_NAME HIRE_DATE SALARY ------------------------- --------- ---------- Sciarra 30.SEP.97 962.5 Urman 07.MÄR.98 975 Popp 07.DEZ.99 862.5
Note that the language of the month abbreviations is German and the decimal character is a period.
The behavior of the NLS_LANG
environment variable implicitly determines the language environment of the database for each session. When a session connects to a database, an ALTER
SESSION
statement is automatically executed to set the values of the database parameters NLS_LANGUAGE
and NLS_TERRITORY
to those specified by the language
and territory
arguments of NLS_LANG
. If NLS_LANG
is not defined, then no implicit ALTER
SESSION
statement is executed.
When NLS_LANG
is defined, the implicit ALTER
SESSION
is executed for all instances to which the session connects, for both direct and indirect connections. If the values of NLS parameters are changed explicitly with ALTER
SESSION
during a session, then the changes are propagated to all instances to which that user session is connected.
Oracle enables you to control the display of date and time. This section contains the following topics:
Different date formats are shown in Table 3-4.
Table 3-4 Date Formats
Country | Description | Example |
---|---|---|
Estonia |
dd.mm.yyyy |
28.02.2003 |
Germany |
dd-mm-rr |
28-02-03 |
Japan |
rr-mm-dd |
03-02-28 |
UK |
dd-mon-rr |
28-Feb-03 |
US |
dd-mon-rr |
28-Feb-03 |
This section includes the following parameters:
Property | Description |
---|---|
Parameter type | String |
Parameter scope | Initialization parameter, environment variable, and ALTER SESSION |
Default value | Derived from NLS_TERRITORY |
Range of values | Any valid date format mask |
The NLS_DATE_FORMAT
parameter defines the default date format to use with the TO_CHAR
and TO_DATE
functions. The NLS_TERRITORY
parameter determines the default value of NLS_DATE_FORMAT
. The value of NLS_DATE_FORMAT
can be any valid date format mask. For example:
NLS_DATE_FORMAT = "MM/DD/YYYY"
To add string literals to the date format, enclose the string literal with double quotes. Note that when double quotes are included in the date format, the entire value must be enclosed by single quotes. For example:
NLS_DATE_FORMAT = '"Date: "MM/DD/YYYY'
Example 3-11 Setting the Date Format to Display Roman Numerals
To set the default date format to display Roman numerals for the month, include the following line in the initialization parameter file:
NLS_DATE_FORMAT = "DD RM YYYY"
Enter the following SELECT
statement:
SELECT TO_CHAR(SYSDATE) currdate FROM DUAL;
You should see the following output if today's date is February 12, 1997:
CURRDATE --------- 12 II 1997
The value of NLS_DATE_FORMAT
is stored in the internal date format. Each format element occupies two bytes, and each string occupies the number of bytes in the string plus a terminator byte. Also, the entire format mask has a two-byte terminator. For example, "MM/DD/YY" occupies 14 bytes internally because there are three format elements (month, day, and year), two 3-byte strings (the two slashes), and the two-byte terminator for the format mask. The format for the value of NLS_DATE_FORMAT
cannot exceed 24 bytes.
You can alter the default value of NLS_DATE_FORMAT
by:
Changing its value in the initialization parameter file and then restarting the instance
Using an ALTER
SESSION
SET
NLS_DATE_FORMAT
statement
See Also: Oracle Database SQL Reference for more information about date format elements and theALTER SESSION statement |
If a table or index is partitioned on a date column, and if the date format specified by NLS_DATE_FORMAT
does not specify the first two digits of the year, then you must use the TO_DATE
function with a 4-character format mask for the year.
For example:
TO_DATE('11-jan-1997', 'dd-mon-yyyy')
See Also: Oracle Database SQL Reference for more information about partitioning tables and indexes and usingTO_DATE |
Property | Description |
---|---|
Parameter type | String |
Parameter scope | Initialization parameter, environment variable, ALTER SESSION , and SQL functions |
Default value | Derived from NLS_LANGUAGE |
Range of values | Any valid language name |
The NLS_DATE_LANGUAGE
parameter specifies the language for the day and month names produced by the TO_CHAR
and TO_DATE
functions.
NLS_DATE_LANGUAGE
overrides the language that is specified implicitly by NLS_LANGUAGE
. NLS_DATE_LANGUAGE
has the same syntax as the NLS_LANGUAGE
parameter, and all supported languages are valid values.
NLS_DATE_LANGUAGE
also determines the language used for:
Month and day abbreviations returned by the TO_CHAR
and TO_DATE
functions
Month and day abbreviations used by the default date format (NLS_DATE_FORMAT
)
Abbreviations for AM, PM, AD, and BC
Example 3-12 NLS_DATE_LANGUAGE=FRENCH, Month and Day Names
As an example of how to use NLS_DATE_LANGUAGE
, set the date language to French:
ALTER SESSION SET NLS_DATE_LANGUAGE = FRENCH;
Enter a SELECT
statement:
SELECT TO_CHAR(SYSDATE, 'Day:Dd Month yyyy') FROM DUAL;
You should see output similar to the following:
TO_CHAR(SYSDATE,'DAY:DDMONTHYYYY') ------------------------------------------------------------ Vendredi:07 Décembre 2001
When numbers are spelled in words using the TO_CHAR
function, the English spelling is always used. For example, enter the following SELECT
statement:
SQL> SELECT TO_CHAR(TO_DATE('12-Oct.-2001'),'Day: ddspth Month') FROM DUAL;
You should see output similar to the following:
TO_CHAR(TO_DATE('12-OCT.-2001'),'DAY:DDSPTHMONTH') -------------------------------------------------------------------- Vendredi: twelfth Octobre
Example 3-13 NLS_DATE_LANGUAGE=FRENCH, Month and Day Abbreviations
Month and day abbreviations are determined by NLS_DATE_LANGUAGE
. Enter the following SELECT
statement:
SELECT TO_CHAR(SYSDATE, 'Dy:dd Mon yyyy') FROM DUAL;
You should see output similar to the following:
TO_CHAR(SYSDATE,'DY:DDMO ------------------------ Ve:07 Déc. 2001
Example 3-14 NLS_DATE_LANGUAGE=FRENCH, Default Date Format
The default date format uses the month abbreviations determined by NLS_DATE_LANGUAGE
. For example, if the default date format is DD-MON-YYYY
, then insert a date as follows:
INSERT INTO tablename VALUES ('12-Févr.-1997');
Different time formats are shown in Table 3-5.
Table 3-5 Time Formats
Country | Description | Example |
---|---|---|
Estonia |
hh24:mi:ss |
13:50:23 |
Germany |
hh24:mi:ss |
13:50:23 |
Japan |
hh24:mi:ss |
13:50:23 |
UK |
hh24:mi:ss |
13:50:23 |
US |
hh:mi:ssxff am |
1:50:23.555 PM |
This section contains information about the following parameters:
Property | Description |
---|---|
Parameter type | String |
Parameter scope | Initialization parameter, environment variable, and ALTER SESSION |
Default value | Derived from NLS_TERRITORY |
Range of values | Any valid datetime format mask |
NLS_TIMESTAMP_FORMAT
defines the default date format for the TIMESTAMP
and TIMESTAMP WITH LOCAL TIME ZONE
datatypes. The following example shows a value for NLS_TIMESTAMP_FORMAT
:
NLS_TIMESTAMP_FORMAT = 'YYYY-MM-DD HH:MI:SS.FF'
Example 3-15 Timestamp Format
SQL> SELECT TO_TIMESTAMP('11-nov-2000 01:00:00.336', 'dd-mon-yyyy hh:mi:ss.ff')
FROM DUAL;
You should see output similar to the following:
TO_TIMESTAMP('11-NOV-200001:00:00.336','DD-MON-YYYYHH:MI:SS.FF') --------------------------------------------------------------------------- 2000-11-11 01:00:00.336000000
You can specify the value of NLS_TIMESTAMP_FORMAT
by setting it in the initialization parameter file. You can specify its value for a client as a client environment variable.
You can also alter the value of NLS_TIMESTAMP_FORMAT
by:
Changing its value in the initialization parameter file and then restarting the instance
Using the ALTER
SESSION
SET
NLS_TIMESTAMP_FORMAT
statement
See Also: Oracle Database SQL Reference for more information about theTO_TIMESTAMP function and the ALTER SESSION statement |
Property | Description |
---|---|
Parameter type | String |
Parameter scope | Initialization parameter, environment variable, and ALTER SESSION |
Default value | Derived from NLS_TERRITORY |
Range of values | Any valid datetime format mask |
NLS_TIMESTAMP_TZ_FORMAT
defines the default date format for the TIMESTAMP
and TIMESTAMP WITH LOCAL TIME ZONE
datatypes. It is used with the TO_CHAR
and TO_TIMESTAMP_TZ
functions.
You can specify the value of NLS_TIMESTAMP_TZ_FORMAT
by setting it in the initialization parameter file. You can specify its value for a client as a client environment variable.
Example 3-16 Setting NLS_TIMESTAMP_TZ_FORMAT
The format value must be surrounded by quotation marks. For example:
NLS_TIMESTAMP_TZ_FORMAT = 'YYYY-MM-DD HH:MI:SS.FF TZH:TZM'
The following example of the TO_TIMESTAMP_TZ
function uses the format value that was specified for NLS_TIMESTAMP_TZ_FORMAT
:
SQL> SELECT TO_TIMESTAMP_TZ('2000-08-20, 05:00:00.55 America/Los_Angeles', 'yyyy-mm-dd hh:mi:ss.ff TZR') FROM DUAL;
You should see output similar to the following:
TO_TIMESTAMP_TZ('2000-08-20,05:00:00.55AMERICA/LOS_ANGELES','YYYY-MM-DDHH:M --------------------------------------------------------------------------- 2000-08-20 05:00:00.550000000 -07:00
You can change the value of NLS_TIMESTAMP_TZ_FORMAT
by:
Changing its value in the initialization parameter file and then restarting the instance
Using the ALTER
SESSION
statement.
See Also:
|
This section includes the following topics:
The following calendar information is stored for each territory:
Some cultures consider Sunday to be the first day of the week. Others consider Monday to be the first day of the week. A German calendar starts with Monday, as shown in Table 3-6.
Table 3-6 German Calendar Example: March 1998
Mo | Di | Mi | Do | Fr | Sa | So |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
- |
- |
- |
- |
- |
- |
1 |
2 |
3 |
4 |
5 |
6 |
7 |
8 |
9 |
10 |
11 |
12 |
13 |
14 |
15 |
16 |
17 |
18 |
19 |
20 |
21 |
22 |
23 |
24 |
25 |
26 |
27 |
28 |
29 |
30 |
31 |
- |
- |
- |
- |
- |
The first day of the week is determined by the NLS_TERRITORY
parameter.
Some countries use week numbers for scheduling, planning, and bookkeeping. Oracle supports this convention. In the ISO standard, the week number can be different from the week number of the calendar year. For example, 1st Jan 1988 is in ISO week number 53 of 1987. An ISO week always starts on a Monday and ends on a Sunday.
If January 1 falls on a Friday, Saturday, or Sunday, then the ISO week that includes January 1 is the last week of the previous year, because most of the days in the week belong to the previous year.
If January 1 falls on a Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, or Thursday, then the ISO week is the first week of the new year, because most of the days in the week belong to the new year.
To support the ISO standard, Oracle provides the IW date format element. It returns the ISO week number.
Table 3-7 shows an example in which January 1 occurs in a week that has four or more days in the first calendar week of the year. The week containing January 1 is the first ISO week of 1998.
Table 3-7 First ISO Week of the Year: Example 1, January 1998
Mo | Tu | We | Th | Fr | Sa | Su | ISO Week |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
- |
- |
- |
1 |
2 |
3 |
4 |
First ISO week of 1998 |
5 |
6 |
7 |
8 |
9 |
10 |
11 |
Second ISO week of 1998 |
12 |
13 |
14 |
15 |
16 |
17 |
18 |
Third ISO week of 1998 |
19 |
20 |
21 |
22 |
23 |
24 |
25 |
Fourth ISO week of 1998 |
26 |
27 |
28 |
29 |
30 |
31 |
- |
Fifth ISO week of 1998 |
Table 3-8 shows an example in which January 1 occurs in a week that has three or fewer days in the first calendar week of the year. The week containing January 1 is the 53rd ISO week of 1998, and the following week is the first ISO week of 1999.
Table 3-8 First ISO Week of the Year: Example 2, January 1999
Mo | Tu | We | Th | Fr | Sa | Su | ISO Week |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
- |
- |
- |
- |
1 |
2 |
3 |
Fifty-third ISO week of 1998 |
4 |
5 |
6 |
7 |
8 |
9 |
10 |
First ISO week of 1999 |
11 |
12 |
13 |
14 |
15 |
16 |
17 |
Second ISO week of 1999 |
18 |
19 |
20 |
21 |
22 |
23 |
24 |
Third ISO week of 1999 |
25 |
26 |
27 |
28 |
29 |
30 |
31 |
Fourth ISO week of 1999 |
The first calendar week of the year is determined by the NLS_TERRITORY
parameter.
Oracle supports six calendar systems in addition to Gregorian, the default:
Japanese Imperial—uses the same number of months and days as Gregorian, but the year starts with the beginning of each Imperial Era
ROC Official—uses the same number of months and days as Gregorian, but the year starts with the founding of the Republic of China
Persian—has 31 days for each of the first six months. The next five months have 30 days each. The last month has either 29 days or 30 days (leap year).
Thai Buddha—uses a Buddhist calendar
Arabic Hijrah—has 12 months with 354 or 355 days
English Hijrah—has 12 months with 354 or 355 days
The calendar system is specified by the NLS_CALENDAR
parameter.
The Islamic calendar starts from the year of the Hegira.
The Japanese Imperial calendar starts from the beginning of an Emperor's reign. For example, 1998 is the tenth year of the Heisei era. It should be noted, however, that the Gregorian system is also widely understood in Japan, so both 98 and Heisei 10 can be used to represent 1998.
Property | Description |
---|---|
Parameter type | String |
Parameter scope | Initialization parameter, environment variable, ALTER SESSION , and SQL functions |
Default value | Gregorian |
Range of values | Any valid calendar format name |
Many different calendar systems are in use throughout the world. NLS_CALENDAR
specifies which calendar system Oracle uses.
NLS_CALENDAR
can have one of the following values:
Arabic Hijrah
English Hijrah
Gregorian
Japanese Imperial
Persian
ROC Official (Republic of China)
Thai Buddha
See Also: Appendix A, "Locale Data" for a list of calendar systems, their default date formats, and the character sets in which dates are displayed |
This section includes the following topics:
The database must know the number-formatting convention used in each session to interpret numeric strings correctly. For example, the database needs to know whether numbers are entered with a period or a comma as the decimal character (234.00 or 234,00). Similarly, applications must be able to display numeric information in the format expected at the client site.
Examples of numeric formats are shown in Table 3-9.
Table 3-9 Examples of Numeric Formats
Country | Numeric Formats |
---|---|
Estonia |
1 234 567,89 |
Germany |
1.234.567,89 |
Japan |
1,234,567.89 |
UK |
1,234,567.89 |
US |
1,234,567.89 |
Numeric formats are derived from the setting of the NLS_TERRITORY
parameter, but they can be overridden by the NLS_NUMERIC_CHARACTERS
parameter.
Property | Description |
---|---|
Parameter type | String |
Parameter scope | Initialization parameter, environment variable, ALTER SESSION , and SQL functions |
Default value | Default decimal character and group separator for a particular territory |
Range of values | Any two valid numeric characters |
This parameter specifies the decimal character and group separator. The group separator is the character that separates integer groups to show thousands and millions, for example. The group separator is the character returned by the G number format mask. The decimal character separates the integer and decimal parts of a number. Setting NLS_NUMERIC_CHARACTERS
overrides the values derived from the setting of NLS_TERRITORY
.
Any character can be the decimal character or group separator. The two characters specified must be single-byte, and the characters must be different from each other. The characters cannot be any numeric character or any of the following characters: plus (+), hyphen (-), less than sign (<), greater than sign (>). Either character can be a space.
Example 3-18 Setting NLS_NUMERIC_CHARACTERS
To set the decimal character to a comma and the grouping separator to a period, define NLS_NUMERIC_CHARACTERS
as follows:
ALTER SESSION SET NLS_NUMERIC_CHARACTERS = ",.";
SQL statements can include numbers represented as numeric or text literals. Numeric literals are not enclosed in quotes. They are part of the SQL language syntax and always use a dot as the decimal character and never contain a group separator. Text literals are enclosed in single quotes. They are implicitly or explicitly converted to numbers, if required, according to the current NLS settings.
The following SELECT
statement formats the number 4000 with the decimal character and group separator specified in the ALTER SESSION
statement:
SELECT TO_CHAR(4000, '9G999D99') FROM DUAL;
You should see output similar to the following:
TO_CHAR(4 --------- 4.000,00
You can change the default value of NLS_NUMERIC_CHARACTERS
by:
Property | Description |
---|---|
Parameter type | String |
Parameter scope | Environment variable |
Default value | Derived from NLS_TERRITORY |
Range of values | Any valid character |
NLS_LIST_SEPARATOR
specifies the character to use to separate values in a list of values (usually ,
or .
or ;
or :
). Its default value is derived from the value of NLS_TERRITORY
. For example, a list of numbers from 1 to 5 can be expressed as 1,2,3,4,5 or 1.2.3.4.5 or 1;2;3;4;5 or 1:2:3:4:5.
The character specified must be single-byte and cannot be the same as either the numeric or monetary decimal character, any numeric character, or any of the following characters: plus (+), hyphen (-), less than sign (<), greater than sign (>), period (.).
This section includes the following topics:
Different currency formats are used throughout the world. Some typical ones are shown in Table 3-10.
Property | Description |
---|---|
Parameter type | String |
Parameter scope | Initialization parameter, environment variable, ALTER SESSION , and SQL functions |
Default value | Derived from NLS_TERRITORY |
Range of values | Any valid currency symbol string |
NLS_CURRENCY
specifies the character string returned by the L number format mask, the local currency symbol. Setting NLS_CURRENCY
overrides the setting defined implicitly by NLS_TERRITORY
.
Example 3-19 Displaying the Local Currency Symbol
Connect to the sample order entry schema:
SQL> connect oe/oe Connected.
Enter a SELECT
statement similar to the following:
SQL> SELECT TO_CHAR(order_total, 'L099G999D99') "total" FROM orders
WHERE order_id > 2450;
You should see output similar to the following:
total --------------------- $078,279.60 $006,653.40 $014,087.50 $010,474.60 $012,589.00 $000,129.00 $003,878.40 $021,586.20
You can change the default value of NLS_CURRENCY
by:
Property | Description |
---|---|
Parameter type | String |
Parameter scope | Initialization parameter, environment variable, ALTER SESSION , and SQL functions |
Default value | Derived from NLS_TERRITORY |
Range of values | Any valid string |
NLS_ISO_CURRENCY
specifies the character string returned by the C
number format mask, the ISO currency symbol. Setting NLS_ISO_CURRENCY
overrides the value defined implicitly by NLS_TERRITORY
.
Local currency symbols can be ambiguous. For example, a dollar sign ($) can refer to US dollars or Australian dollars. ISO specifications define unique currency symbols for specific territories or countries. For example, the ISO currency symbol for the US dollar is USD. The ISO currency symbol for the Australian dollar is AUD.
More ISO currency symbols are shown in Table 3-11.
Table 3-11 ISO Currency Examples
Country | Example |
---|---|
Estonia |
1 234 567,89 EEK |
Germany |
1.234.567,89 EUR |
Japan |
1,234,567.89 JPY |
UK |
1,234,567.89 GBP |
US |
1,234,567.89 USD |
NLS_ISO_CURRENCY
has the same syntax as the NLS_TERRITORY
parameter, and all supported territories are valid values.
Example 3-20 Setting NLS_ISO_CURRENCY
This example assumes that you are connected as oe/oe
in the sample schema.
To specify the ISO currency symbol for France, set NLS_ISO_CURRENCY
as follows:
ALTER SESSION SET NLS_ISO_CURRENCY = FRANCE;
Enter a SELECT
statement:
SQL> SELECT TO_CHAR(order_total, 'C099G999D99') "TOTAL" FROM orders
WHERE customer_id = 146;
You should see output similar to the following:
TOTAL ------------------ EUR017,848.20 EUR027,455.30 EUR029,249.10 EUR013,824.00 EUR000,086.00
Changing its value in the initialization parameter file and then restarting the instance
Using an ALTER
SESSION
statement
Property | Description |
---|---|
Parameter type | String |
Parameter scope | Initialization parameter, environmental variable, ALTER SESSION , and SQL functions |
Default value | Derived from NLS_TERRITORY |
Range of values | Any valid symbol |
Use NLS_DUAL_CURRENCY
to override the default dual currency symbol defined implicitly by NLS_TERRITORY
.
NLS_DUAL_CURRENCY
was introduced to support the euro currency symbol during the euro transition period. See Table A-8, "Character Sets that Support the Euro Symbol" for the character sets that support the euro symbol.
Twelve members of the European Monetary Union (EMU) have adopted the euro as their currency. Setting NLS_TERRITORY
to correspond to a country in the EMU (Austria, Belgium, Finland, France, Germany, Greece, Ireland, Italy, Luxembourg, the Netherlands, Portugal, and Spain) results in the default values for NLS_CURRENCY
and NLS_DUAL_CURRENCY
being set to EUR
.
During the transition period (1999 through 2001), Oracle support for the euro was provided in Oracle Database 8i and later as follows:
NLS_CURRENCY
was defined as the primary currency of the country
NLS_ISO_CURRENCY
was defined as the ISO currency code of a given territory
NLS_DUAL_CURRENCY
was defined as the secondary currency symbol (usually the euro) for a given territory
Beginning with Oracle Database 9i Release 2, the value of NLS_ISO_CURRENCY
results in the ISO currency symbol being set to EUR
for EMU member countries who use the euro. For example, suppose NLS_ISO_CURRENCY
is set to FRANCE
. Enter the following SELECT
statement:
SELECT TO_CHAR(order_total, 'C099G999D99') "TOTAL" FROM orders WHERE customer_id=116;
You should see output similar to the following:
TOTAL ------- EUR006,394.80 EUR011,097.40 EUR014,685.80 EUR000,129.00
Customers who must retain their obsolete local currency symbol can override the default for NLS_DUAL_CURRENCY
or NLS_CURRENCY
by defining them as parameters in the initialization file on the server and as environment variables on the client.
Note: NLS_LANG must also be set on the client for NLS_CURRENCY or NLS_DUAL_CURRENCY to take effect. |
It is not possible to override the ISO currency symbol that results from the value of NLS_ISO_CURRENCY
.
Property | Description |
---|---|
Parameter type | String |
Parameter scope | Environment variable |
Default value | Derived from NLS_TERRITORY |
Range of values | Any valid character |
NLS_MONETARY_CHARACTERS
specifies the character that separates groups of numbers in monetary expressions. For example, when the territory is America, the thousands separator is a comma, and the decimal separator is a period.
Property | Description |
---|---|
Parameter type | String |
Parameter scope | Environment variable |
Default value | Derived from NLS_TERRITORY |
Range of values | Any string, maximum of 9 bytes (not including null) |
NLS_CREDIT
sets the symbol that displays a credit in financial reports. The default value of this parameter is determined by NLS_TERRITORY
. For example, a space is a valid value of NLS_CREDIT
.
This parameter can be specified only in the client environment.
It can be retrieved through the OCIGetNlsInfo()
function.
Property | Description |
---|---|
Parameter type | String |
Parameter scope | Environment variable |
Default value | Derived from NLS_TERRITORY |
Range of values | Any string, maximum or 9 bytes (not including null) |
NLS_DEBIT
sets the symbol that displays a debit in financial reports. The default value of this parameter is determined by NLS_TERRITORY
. For example, a minus sign (-) is a valid value of NLS_DEBIT
.
This parameter can be specified only in the client environment.
It can be retrieved through the OCIGetNlsInfo()
function.
You can choose how to sort data by using linguistic sort parameters.
This section includes the following topics:
Property | Description |
---|---|
Parameter type | String |
Parameter scope | Initialization parameter, environment variable, ALTER SESSION , and SQL functions |
Default value | Derived from NLS_LANGUAGE |
Range of values | BINARY or any valid linguistic sort name |
NLS_SORT
specifies the type of sort for character data. It overrides the default value that is derived from NLS_LANGUAGE
.
NLS_SORT
contains either of the following values:
NLS_SORT = BINARY | sort_name
BINARY
specifies a binary sort. sort_
name
specifies a linguistic sort sequence.
Example 3-21 Setting NLS_SORT
To specify the German linguistic sort sequence, set NLS_SORT
as follows:
NLS_SORT = German
Note: When theNLS_SORT parameter is set to BINARY , the optimizer can, in some cases, satisfy the ORDER BY clause without doing a sort by choosing an index scan.
When If a linguistic index exists for the linguistic sort specified by |
You can alter the default value of NLS_SORT
by doing one of the following:
Changing its value in the initialization parameter file and then restarting the instance
Using an ALTER
SESSION
statement
See Also:
|
Property | Description |
---|---|
Parameter type | String |
Parameter scope | Initialization parameter, environment variable, and ALTER SESSION |
Default value | BINARY |
Range of values | BINARY , LINGUISTIC , or ANSI |
The value of NLS_COMP
affects the comparison behavior of SQL operations.
You can use NLS_COMP
to avoid the cumbersome process of using the NLSSORT
function in SQL statements when you want to perform a linguistic comparison instead of a binary comparison. When NLS_COMP
is set to LINGUISTIC
, SQL operations perform a linguistic comparison based on the value of NLS_SORT
. A setting of ANSI
is for backward compatibility; in general, you should set NLS_COMP
to LINGUISTIC
when you want to perform a linguistic comparison.
Set NLS_COMP
to LINGUISTIC
as follows:
ALTER SESSION SET NLS_COMP = LINGUISTIC;
When NLS_COMP
is set to LINGUISTIC
, a linguistic index improves the performance of the linguistic comparison. To enable a linguistic index, use the following syntax:
CREATE INDEX i ON t(NLSSORT(col, 'NLS_SORT=FRENCH'));
This section includes the following topic:
Property | Description |
---|---|
Parameter type | String |
Parameter scope | Initialization parameter and ALTER SESSION |
Default value | FALSE |
Range of values | TRUE or FALSE |
NLS_NCHAR_CONV_EXCP
determines whether an error is reported when there is data loss during an implicit or explicit character type conversion between NCHAR
/NVARCHAR
data and CHAR
/VARCHAR2
data. The default value results in no error being reported.
See Also: Chapter 11, "Character Set Migration" for more information about data loss during character set conversion |
This section includes the following topic:
Property | Description |
---|---|
Parameter type | String |
Parameter scope | Environment variable, initialization parameter, and ALTER SESSION |
Default value | BYTE |
Range of values | BYTE or CHAR |
By default, the character datatypes CHAR
and VARCHAR2
are specified in bytes, not characters. Hence, the specification CHAR(20)
in a table definition allows 20 bytes for storing character data.
This works well if the database character set uses a single-byte character encoding scheme because the number of characters is the same as the number of bytes. If the database character set uses a multibyte character encoding scheme, then the number of bytes no longer equals the number of characters because a character can consist of one or more bytes. Thus, column widths must be chosen with care to allow for the maximum possible number of bytes for a given number of characters. You can overcome this problem by switching to character semantics when defining the column size.
NLS_LENGTH_SEMANTICS
enables you to create CHAR
, VARCHAR2
, and LONG
columns using either byte or character length semantics. NCHAR
, NVARCHAR2
, CLOB
, and NCLOB
columns are always character-based. Existing columns are not affected.
You may be required to use byte semantics in order to maintain compatibility with existing applications.
NLS_LENGTH_SEMANTICS
does not apply to tables in SYS
and SYSTEM
. The data dictionary always uses byte semantics.
Note that if the NLS_LENGTH_SEMANTICS
environment variable is not set on the client, then the client session defaults to the value for NLS_LENGTH_SEMANTICS
on the database server. This enables all client sessions on the network to have the same NLS_LENGTH_SEMANTICS
behavior. Setting the environment variable on an individual client enables the server initialization parameter to be overridden for that client.