A column expression, which is designated as column_expression
in subsequent syntax diagrams, is a limited form of expr
. A column expression can be a simple expression, compound expression, function expression, or expression list, but it can contain only the following forms of expression:
Columns of the subject table — the table being created, altered, or indexed
Constants (strings or numbers)
Deterministic functions — either SQL built-in functions or user-defined functions
No other expression forms described in this chapter are valid. In addition, compound expressions using the PRIOR
keyword are not supported, nor are aggregate functions.
You can use a column expression for these purposes:
To create a function-based index.
To explicitly or implicitly define a virtual column. When you define a virtual column, the defining column_expression
must refer only to columns of the subject table that have already been defined, in the current statement or in a prior statement.
The combined components of a column expression must be deterministic. That is, the same set of input values must return the same set of output values.
See Also:
"Simple Expressions", "Compound Expressions", "Function Expressions", and "Expression Lists" for information on these forms ofexpr
Scripting on this page enhances content navigation, but does not change the content in any way.