Here's a question about string comparison in Oracle PL/SQL. I'm testing a few simple snippets involving blank-padding and non-blank-padding comparison and I run into a specific case where I cannot get what the PL/SQL engine is doing.
Here's my code (I'm running this script on Oracle 12c)
set serveroutput on;
declare
l_char1 char(35) := 'Hello';
l_char2 char(30) := 'Hello ';
l_varchar21 varchar2(35) := 'Hello';
l_varchar22 varchar2(35) := 'Hello ';
begin
/* When a comparison is made between variables of type CHAR,
a blank-padding comparison takes place. */
if ( l_char1 = l_char2) then
dbms_output.put_line('First comparison is TRUE');
else
dbms_output.put_line('First comparison is FALSE');
end if;
/* When at least one of the involved variables is a VARCHAR2,
then a non-blank-padding comparison takes place. None of the
variables involved in the comparison is then modified. */
if ( l_char1 = l_varchar21) then
dbms_output.put_line('Second comparison is TRUE');
else
dbms_output.put_line('Second comparison is FALSE');
end if;
/* yet another non-blank-padding comparison */
if ( l_varchar21 = l_varchar22) then
dbms_output.put_line('Third comparison is TRUE');
else
dbms_output.put_line('Third comparison is FALSE');
end if;
/* Strange behaviour: I supposed both string literals to be
treated as VARCHAR2, so I expected to get FALSE. */
if ( 'MP' = 'MP ') then
dbms_output.put_line('Fourth comparison is TRUE');
else
dbms_output.put_line('Fourth comparison is FALSE');
end if;
end;
Here's the output
Procedura PL/SQL completata correttamente.
First comparison is TRUE
Second comparison is FALSE
Third comparison is FALSE
Fourth comparison is TRUE ** I expected FALSE **
About the string literals comparison, I expected to get what is reported on Oracle documentation; I quote the key sentence:
Trailing blanks are significant within string literals, so 'abc' and 'abc ' are different. Trailing blanks in a string literal are not trimmed during PL/SQL processing, although they are trimmed if you insert that value into a table column of type CHAR. For additional information, including NCHAR string literals, see "String Literals".
Any idea to explain what I found? Could this depend on a specific setting in my Oracle environment/session ?