Someone recently asked me this question and I thought I'd post it on Stack Overflow to get some input.
Now obviously both of the following scenarios are supposed to fail.
#1:
DECLARE @x BIGINT
SET @x = 100
SELECT CAST(@x AS VARCHAR(2))
Obvious error:
Msg 8115, Level 16, State 2, Line 3
Arithmetic overflow error converting expression to data type varchar.
#2:
DECLARE @x INT
SET @x = 100
SELECT CAST(@x AS VARCHAR(2))
Not obvious, it returns a * (One would expect this to be an arithmetic overflow as well???)
Now my real question is, why??? Is this merely by design or is there history or something sinister behind this?
I looked at a few sites and couldn't get a satisfactory answer.
http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/aa226054(v=sql.80).aspx
Please note I know/understand that when an integer is too large to be converted to a specific sized string that it will be "converted" to an asterisk, this is the obvious answer and I wish I could downvote everyone that keeps on giving this answer. I want to know why an asterisk is used and not an exception thrown, e.g. historical reasons etc??
int
andbigint
, but as for choosing the asterisk as the filler character, there might be historical reasons for that. I remember that*
was used in similar situations in FoxPro, before it in FoxBase, which might have been re-enacting the feature/behaviour after dBase, and that would be the earliest I could trace this*
usage to.int
andcast
being standard,bigint
not), but according to my reading of the standard, it should always be an error condition (although it should be a truncation error, not an overflow error)*
, but in the new day, since bigint was added (bigint wasn't available in SQL Server 7.0) being a datatype they did it right and issue an error. They can't break all code that relies on the*
so they leave it, until it will be phased out.