What does ||
do in SQL?
SELECT 'a' || ',' || 'b' AS letter
||
represents string concatenation. Unfortunately, string concatenation is not completely portable across all sql dialects:
||
(infix operator)concat
( vararg function ). caution: ||
means 'logical or' (It's configurable, however; thanks to @hvd for pointing that out)||
(infix operator), concat
( caution: function of arity 2 only ! )||
(infix operator)+
(infix operator), concat
( vararg function )||
(infix operator)hopefully the confusion is complete ...
It is a concat statement. It will concatenate the two strings.
Here is a helpful post!
What is the difference between "||" operator and concat function in Oracle?
SELECT 'a' || ',' || 'b' AS letter will combine a letter. The result become 'a,b'
In Oracle, SQLite3, and MySQL, it concatenates strings. Please see the Oracle documentation. The MySQL documentation.
Also, it's part of ANSI SQL, but read this for more information.
It's a concatenation operator. So you would get 'a,b' from that.
I think ||
will work on most RDBMS's. SQL Server requires the +
operator (thanks to HVD for setting me straight!).
||
, and requires +
.
– user743382
Apr 29 '14 at 19:13
in oracle its a shortcut for concatenate
http://docs.oracle.com/cd/B19306_01/server.102/b14200/operators003.htm