Skip Headers
Oracle® OLAP DML Reference
10g Release 2 (10.2)

Part Number B14346-01
Go to Documentation Home
Home
Go to Book List
Book List
Go to Table of Contents
Contents
Go to Index
Index
Go to Master Index
Master Index
Go to Feedback page
Feedback

Go to previous page
Previous
Go to next page
Next
View PDF

ZSPELL

The ZSPELL option holds the default text that is used for representing numeric zero values in output produced by the HEADING, REPORT, and ROW commands.

Data type

TEXT

Syntax

ZSPELL = {'text'|'OFF'}

Arguments

text

The spelling to use as the default spelling for numeric zero values. When you specify an expression rather than a text literal, you can omit the single quotes.

OFF

(Default) Shows a zero (0) with the appropriate number of decimal places (determined by a DECIMAL attribute) for each numeric zero value.

Notes

Assigning Zero Values

ZSPELL affects output only; it does not affect the way you assign a zero value. For example, even when you have set ZSPELL to NONE, you still assign a zero value as follows.

var1 = 0

Showing Decimal Places

The default of OFF means that a zero value is shown as 0 (zero), with the number of decimal places indicated by a DECIMAL attribute (for example, 0.00). When you set ZSPELL to the text character 0, zero values are shown as a 0 with no decimal places, regardless of any DECIMAL specification.

Effect of ZSPELL on Values Close to Zero

When your output includes a small number, such as 0.004, the number of decimal places shown affects whether ZSPELL treats the number as zero. See Example 24-52, "Showing Very Small Numbers".

Examples

Example 24-51 Showing Zero Values as NONE

This example changes the value of ZSPELL, so that a zero value in the DECIMAL variable testvar is shown as NONE in report output. When ZSPELL is set to its default value of OFF, the Oracle OLAP statements

testvar = 0.00
ROW testvar

produce the following output.

0.00

In contrast, these OLAP DML statements

ZSPELL = 'NONE'
ROW testvar

produce the following output.

NONE

Example 24-52 Showing Very Small Numbers

This example illustrates how the number of decimal places shown in output affects whether ZSPELL treats very small numbers as zeros. When ZSPELL is set to its default value of OFF, these OLAP DML statements

ZSPELL = 'OFF'
testvar = 0.004
ROW DECIMAL 3 testvar

produce the following output.

0.004

The following statements set ZSPELL to NONE and specify two decimal places for the output.

ZSPELL = 'NONE'
ROW DECIMAL 2 testvar

These statements produce the following output.

NONE

With ZSPELL still set to NONE, the following statement specifies three decimal places for the output.

ROW DECIMAL 3 testvar

This statement produces the following output.

0.004