Numeric data types
Informix®
Informix supports several data types to store numbers:
Informix data type | Description |
---|---|
SMALLINT |
16 bit signed integer |
INTEGER |
32 bit signed integer |
BIGINT |
64 bit signed integer |
INT8 |
64 bit signed integer (replaced by
BIGINT ) |
DECIMAL |
Equivalent to DECIMAL(16) |
DECIMAL(p) |
Floating-point decimal number (max precision is 32) |
DECIMAL(p,s) |
Fixed-point decimal number (max precision is 32) |
MONEY |
Equivalent to DECIMAL(16,2) |
MONEY(p) |
Equivalent to DECIMAL(p,2) (max precision is
32) |
MONEY(p,s) |
Equivalent to DECIMAL(p,s) (max precision is
32) |
REAL / SMALLFLOAT |
32-bit floating point decimal (C float) |
DOUBLE PRECISION / FLOAT[(n)] |
64-bit floating point decimal (C double) |
Microsoft™ SQL Server
Microsoft SQL Server supports the following numeric data types:
Microsoft SQL Server data type | Description |
---|---|
SMALLINT |
16 bit signed integer |
INTEGER |
32 bit signed integer |
BIGINT |
64 bit signed integer |
DECIMAL(p,s) |
Fixed point decimal. |
SMALLMONEY |
32-bit floating point decimal with currency |
MONEY |
64-bit floating point decimal with currency |
REAL |
32-bit floating point decimal (C float) |
FLOAT[(n)] (DOUBLE) |
64-bit floating point decimal (C double) |
Notes about SQL Server
DECIMAL
type:- Without any decimal storage specification, the precision defaults to 18 and the scale defaults
to zero:
DECIMAL
in SQL Server =DECIMAL(18,0)
in Genero BDL.DECIMAL(p)
in SQL Server =DECIMAL(p,0)
in Genero BDL.
- The maximum precision is 38.
Notes about the SQL Server
MONEY
and SMALLMONEY
types:- SQL Server provides the
MONEY
andSMALLMONEY
data types, but the currency symbol handling is quite different. Therefore, it is recommended to implement InformixMONEY
columns asDECIMAL
columns in SQL Server.
Solution
Use the following conversion rules to map Informix numeric types to SQL Server numeric types:
Informix | Microsoft SQL SERVER |
---|---|
SMALLINT |
SMALLINT |
INTEGER |
INT / INTEGER |
BIGINT |
BIGINT |
INT8 |
BIGINT |
DECIMAL(p,s) |
DECIMAL(p,s) |
DECIMAL(p<=19) |
DECIMAL(2*p,p) |
DECIMAL(p>19) |
N/A |
DECIMAL |
DECIMAL(32,16) |
MONEY(p,s) |
DECIMAL(p,s) |
MONEY(p) |
DECIMAL(p,2) |
MONEY |
DECIMAL(16,2) |
REAL / SMALLFLOAT |
REAL |
FLOAT[(n)] / DOUBLE PRECISION |
FLOAT(n) (Where n must be from 1 to 15) |
When creating tables from BDL programs, the database interface automatically converts Informix numeric data types to corresponding Microsoft SQL Server data types. In database creation scripts, apply the conversion rules as described in the above table.
Important: There is no SQL Server equivalent for the Informix
DECIMAL(p)
floating point decimal (i.e. without
a scale). If your application is using such data types, you must review the database schema in order
to use SQL Server compatible types. To workaround the SQL Server limitation, the SQL Server database
drivers convert DECIMAL(p)
types to a DECIMAL( 2*p, p )
, to store
all possible numbers an Informix
DECIMAL(p)
can store. However, the original Informix precision cannot exceed 19, since SQL Server maximum DECIMAL
precision is 38(2*19)
. If the original precision is bigger than 19, a CREATE
TABLE
statement executed from a Genero program will fail with an SQL Server error
2750.The numeric types translation can be
controlled with the following FGLPROFILE
entries:
dbi.database.dsname.ifxemul.datatype.smallint = { true | false }
dbi.database.dsname.ifxemul.datatype.integer = { true | false }
dbi.database.dsname.ifxemul.datatype.bigint = { true | false }
dbi.database.dsname.ifxemul.datatype.int8 = { true | false }
dbi.database.dsname.ifxemul.datatype.decimal = { true | false }
dbi.database.dsname.ifxemul.datatype.money = { true | false }
dbi.database.dsname.ifxemul.datatype.float = { true | false }
dbi.database.dsname.ifxemul.datatype.smallfloat = { true | false }
For more details see IBM Informix emulation parameters in FGLPROFILE.