51

I want to be able to display the resulting data from a select in a pretty way, not all columns under others.

Here is the way sqlplus displays my table data:

enter image description here

But I want to show them as:

Name   |    Address    |    Phone    |
-------+---------------+-------------+
name1  |    address1   |    phone1   |
name2  |    address2   |    phone2   |
name3  |    address3   |    phone3   |

Not each column under the other

1
  • errr.. i want to show them just like a normal table. one after another one
    – Nubkadiya
    Jun 9, 2010 at 13:51

5 Answers 5

81

I usually start with something like:

set lines 256
set trimout on
set tab off

Have a look at help set if you have the help information installed. And then select name,address rather than select * if you really only want those two columns.

3
  • 2
    @user206168 - the question was about SQL*Plus. Can you expand on what doesn't work?
    – Alex Poole
    Oct 23, 2014 at 18:03
  • What's the point of the set space 1 and the set tab off ? Nov 13, 2014 at 16:53
  • 1
    @Coffee - I set tab off so it pads things with spaces instead of tab characters; doesn't matter on-screen but if the output is put in a file then it can have odd effects, if tab widths aren't the same. set space 1 is redundant though; space is obsolete for start, and it defaults to 1 anyway; but it's the equivalent of set colsep ' '. I think I've carried this from a really old environment that defaulted to three spaces between columns, and I just preferred one.
    – Alex Poole
    Nov 13, 2014 at 17:02
52

If you mean you want to see them like this:

WORKPLACEID NAME       ADDRESS        TELEPHONE
----------- ---------- -------------- ---------
          1 HSBC       Nugegoda Road      43434
          2 HNB Bank   Colombo Road      223423

then in SQL Plus you can set the column widths like this (for example):

column name format a10
column address format a20
column telephone format 999999999

You can also specify the line size and page size if necessary like this:

set linesize 100 pagesize 50

You do this by typing those commands into SQL Plus before running the query. Or you can put these commands and the query into a script file e.g. myscript.sql and run that. For example:

column name format a10
column address format a20
column telephone format 999999999

select name, address, telephone
from mytable;
3
  • 3
    Also we would probably want to SET PAGESIZE 200 (say) in order to reduce the repetition of the column headings in a big resultset.
    – APC
    Jun 9, 2010 at 19:09
  • so this should done during the table creation or can you please elobarate more on this
    – Nubkadiya
    Jun 11, 2010 at 15:25
  • lines and pages NEVER worked for me. Using column is easy, and fantastic. Thanks Sep 14, 2016 at 1:12
8

You can set the line size as per the width of the window and set wrap off using the following command.

set linesize 160;
set wrap off;

I have used 160 as per my preference you can set it to somewhere between 100 - 200 and setting wrap will not your data and it will display the data properly.

2

In case you have a dump made with sqlplus and the output is garbled as someone did not set those 3 values before, there's a way out.

Just a couple hours ago DB admin send me that ugly looking output of query executed in sqlplus (I dunno, maybe he hates me...). I had to find a way out: this is an awk script to parse that output to make it at least more readable. It's far not perfect, but I did not have enough time to polish it properly. Anyway, it does the job quite well.

awk ' function isDashed(ln){return ln ~ /^---+/};function addLn(){ln2=ln1; ln1=ln0;ln0=$0};function isLoaded(){return l==1||ln2!=""}; function printHeader(){hdr=hnames"\n"hdash;if(hdr!=lastHeader){lastHeader=hdr;print hdr};hnames="";hdash=""};function isHeaderFirstLn(){return isDashed(ln0) && !isDashed(ln1) && !isDashed(ln2) }; function isDataFirstLn(){return isDashed(ln2)&&!isDashed(ln1)&&!isDashed(ln0)}                         BEGIN{_d=1;h=1;hnames="";hdash="";val="";ln2="";ln1="";ln0="";fheadln=""}                                 { addLn();  if(!isLoaded()){next}; l=1;             if(h==1){if(!isDataFirstLn()){if(_d==0){hnames=hnames" "ln1;_d=1;}else{hdash=hdash" "ln1;_d=0}}else{_d=0;h=0;val=ln1;printHeader()}}else{if(!isHeaderFirstLn()){val=val" "ln1}else{print val;val="";_d=1;h=1;hnames=ln1}}   }END{if(val!="")print val}'

In case anyone else would like to try improve this script, below are the variables: hnames -- column names in the header, hdash - dashed below the header, h -- whether I'm currently parsing header (then ==1), val -- the data, _d - - to swap between hnames and hdash, ln0 - last line read, ln1 - line read previously (it's the one i'm actually working with), ln2 - line read before ln1

Happy parsing!

Oh, almost forgot... I use this to prettify sqlplus output myself:

[oracle@ora ~]$ cat prettify_sql 
set lines 256
set trimout on
set tab off
set pagesize 100
set colsep " | "

colsep is optional, but it makes output look like sqlite which is easier to parse using scripts.

EDIT: A little preview of parsed and non-parsed output

A little preview of parsed and non-parsed output

0

Ahhh, the stupid linesize ... Here is what I do in my profile.sql - works only on unixes:

echo SET LINES $(tput cols) > $HOME/.login_tmp.sql
@$HOME/.login_tmp.sql

if you find an equivalent for tput on Windows, it might work there as well

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.