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Yesterday I wanted to add a boolean field to an Oracle table. However, there isn't actually a boolean data type in Oracle. Does anyone here know the best way to simulate a boolean? Googling the subject discovered several approaches

  1. Use an integer and just don't bother assigning anything other than 0 or 1 to it.

  2. Use a char field with 'Y' or 'N' as the only two values.

  3. Use an enum with the CHECK constraint.

Do experienced Oracle developers know which approach is preferred/canonical?

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7 Answers

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I found this link useful.

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Oracle itself uses Y/N for Boolean values. For completeness it should be noted that pl/sql has a boolean type, it is only tables that do not.

If you are using the field to indicate whether the record needs to be processed or not you might consider using Y and NULL as the values. This makes for a very small (read fast) index that takes very little space.

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Either 1/0 or Y/N with a check constraint on it. ether way is fine. I personally prefer 1/0 as I do alot of work in perl, and it makes it really easy to do perl Boolean operations on database fields.

If you want a really in depth discussion of this question with one of Oracles head honchos, check out what Tom Kyte has to say about this Here

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The database I did most of my work on used 'Y' / 'N' as booleans. With that implementation, you can pull off some tricks like:

  1. Count rows that are true:
    SELECT SUM(CASE WHEN BOOLEAN_FLAG = 'Y' THEN 1 ELSE 0) FROM X

  2. When grouping rows, enforce "If one row is true, then all are true" logic:
    SELECT MAX(BOOLEAN_FLAG) FROM Y
    Conversely, use MIN to force the grouping false if one row is false.

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To use the least amount of space you should use a CHAR field constrained to 'Y' or 'N'. Oracle doesn't support BOOLEAN, BIT, or TINYINT data types, so CHAR's one byte is as small as you can get.

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The 'normal' way to do it is to use a smallint with a 0 or 1 value. However, using an enum is just as valid.

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In our databases we use an enum that ensures we pass it either TRUE or FALSE. If you do it either of the first two ways it is too easy to either start adding new meaning to the integer without going through a proper design, or ending up with that char field having Y, y, N, n, T, t, F, f values and having to remember which section of code uses which table and which version of true it is using.

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