Arithmetic Operators

For arithmetic operators, there are binary operators for addition, subtraction, multiplication, or division, and unary operators to represent whether the number is positive or negative. The unary operators to represent the numbers’ positive/negative status have higher priority over the binary operators.

<expression>  <mathematical_operator>  <expression>

    <expression> ::=
        bit_string |
        character_string |
        numeric_value |
        date-time_value |
        collection_value |
        NULL

    <mathematical_operator> ::=
        <set_arithmetic_operator> |
        <arithmetic_operator>

            <arithmetic_operator> ::=
                + |
                - |
                * |
                { / | DIV } |
                { % | MOD }

            <set_arithmetic_operator> ::=
                UNION |
                DIFFERENCE |
                { INTERSECT | INTERSECTION }
  • <expression>: Declares the mathematical operation to be calculated.

  • <mathematical_operator>: A operator that performs an operation the arithmetic and the set operators are applicable.

    • <set_arithmetic_operator>: A set arithmetic operator that performs operations such as union, difference and intersection on collection type operands.

    • <arithmetic_operator>: An operator to perform the four fundamental arithmetic operations.

The following table shows the arithmetic operators supported by CUBRID and their return values.

Arithmetic Operators

Arithmetic Operator | Description

Operator

Return Value

+ | Addition

1+2

3

-

Subtraction

1-2

-1

*

Multiplication

1*2

2

/

Division. Returns quotient.

1/2.0

0.500000000

DIV

Division. Returns quotient.

1 DIV 2

0

% , MOD

Division. Returns quotient. An operator must be an integer type, and it always returns integer. If an operand is real number, the MOD function can be used.

1 % 2 1 MOD 2

1

Arithmetic Operations and Type Casting of Numeric Data Types

All numeric data types can be used for arithmetic operations. The result type of the operation differs depending on the data types of the operands and the type of the operation. The following table shows the result data types of addition/subtraction/multiplication for each operand type.

Result Data Type by Operand Type

INT

NUMERIC

FLOAT

DOUBLE

INT

INT or BIGINT

NUMERIC

FLOAT

DOUBLE

NUMERIC

NUMERIC

NUMERIC (p and s are also converted)

DOUBLE

DOUBLE

FLOAT

FLOAT

DOUBLE

FLOAT

DOUBLE

DOUBLE

DOUBLE

DOUBLE

DOUBLE

DOUBLE

Note that the result type of the operation does not change if all operands are of the same data type but type casting occurs exceptionally in division operations. An error occurs when a denominator, i.e. a divisor, is 0.

The following table shows the total number of digits (p) and the number of digits after the decimal point (s) of the operation results when all operands are of the NUMERIC type.

Result of NUMERIC Type Operation

Operation

Maximum Precision

Maximum Scale

N(p1, s1) + N(p2, s2)

max(p1-s1, p2-s2)+max(s1, s2) +1

max(s1, s2)

N(p1, s1) - N(p2, s2)

max(p1-s1, p2-s2)+max(s1, s2)

max(s1, s2)

N(p1, s1) * N(p2, s2)

p1+p2+1

s1+s2

N(p1, s1) / N(p2, s2)

Let Pt = p1+max(s1, s2) + s2 - s1 when s2 > 0 and Pt = p1 in other cases; St = s1 when s1 > s2 and s2 in other cases; | the number of decimal places is min(9-St, 38-Pt) + St when St < 9 and St in other cases. |

Example

--int * int
SELECT 123*123;
      123*123
=============
        15129
-- int * int returns overflow error
SELECT (1234567890123*1234567890123);
ERROR: Data overflow on data type bigint.
-- int * numeric returns numeric type
SELECT (1234567890123*CAST(1234567890123 AS NUMERIC(15,2)));
 (1234567890123* cast(1234567890123 as numeric(15,2)))
======================
  1524157875322755800955129.00
-- int * float returns float type
SELECT (1234567890123*CAST(1234567890123 AS FLOAT));
 (1234567890123* cast(1234567890123 as float))
===============================================
                                  1.524158e+024
-- int * double returns double type
SELECT (1234567890123*CAST(1234567890123 AS DOUBLE));
 (1234567890123* cast(1234567890123 as double))
================================================
                          1.524157875322756e+024
-- numeric * numeric returns numeric type
SELECT (CAST(1234567890123 AS NUMERIC(15,2))*CAST(1234567890123 AS NUMERIC(15,2)));
 ( cast(1234567890123 as numeric(15,2))* cast(1234567890123 as numeric(15,2)))
======================
  1524157875322755800955129.0000
-- numeric * float returns double type
SELECT (CAST(1234567890123 AS NUMERIC(15,2))*CAST(1234567890123 AS FLOAT));
 ( cast(1234567890123 as numeric(15,2))* cast(1234567890123 as float))
=======================================================================
                                                 1.524157954716582e+024
-- numeric * double returns double type
SELECT (CAST(1234567890123 AS NUMERIC(15,2))*CAST(1234567890123 AS DOUBLE));
 ( cast(1234567890123 as numeric(15,2))* cast(1234567890123 as double))
========================================================================
                                                  1.524157875322756e+024
-- float * float returns float type
SELECT (CAST(1234567890123 AS FLOAT)*CAST(1234567890123 AS FLOAT));
 ( cast(1234567890123 as float)* cast(1234567890123 as float))
===============================================================
                                                  1.524158e+024
-- float * double returns float type
SELECT (CAST(1234567890123 AS FLOAT)*CAST(1234567890123 AS DOUBLE));
 ( cast(1234567890123 as float)* cast(1234567890123 as double))
================================================================
                                          1.524157954716582e+024
-- double * double returns float type
SELECT (CAST(1234567890123 AS DOUBLE)*CAST(1234567890123 AS DOUBLE));
 ( cast(1234567890123 as double)* cast(1234567890123 as double))
=================================================================
                                           1.524157875322756e+024
-- int / int returns int type without type conversion or rounding
SELECT 100100/100000;
  100100/100000
===============
              1
-- int / int returns int type without type conversion or rounding
SELECT 100100/200200;
  100100/200200
===============
              0
-- int / zero returns error
SELECT 100100/(100100-100100);
ERROR: Attempt to divide by zero.

Arithmetic Operations and Type Casting of DATE/TIME Data Types

If all operands are date/time type, only a subtraction operation is allowed and its return value is BIGINT . Note that the unit of the operation differs depending on the types of the operands. Both addition and subtraction operations are allowed in case of date/time and integer types In this case, operation units and return values are date/time data type.

The following table shows operations allowed for each operand type, and their result types.

Allowable Operation and Result Data Type by Operand Type

TIME (in seconds)

DATE (in day)

TIMESTAMP (in seconds)

DATETIME (in milliseconds)

INT

TIME

A subtraction is allowed. BIGINT

X

X

X

An addition and a subtraction are allowed. TIME

DATE

X

A subtraction is allowed. BIGINT

A subtraction is allowed. BIGINT

A subtraction is allowed. BIGINT

An addition and a subtraction are allowed. DATE

TIMESTAMP

X

A subtraction is allowed. BIGINT

A subtraction is allowed. BIGINT

A subtraction is allowed. BIGINT

An addition and a subtraction are allowed. TIMESTAMP

DATETIME

X

A subtraction is allowed. BIGINT

A subtraction is allowed. BIGINT

A subtraction is allowed. BIGINT

An addition and a subtraction are allowed. DATETIME

INT

An addition and a subtraction are allowed. TIME

An addition and a subtraction are allowed. DATE

An addition and a subtraction are allowed. TIMESTAMP

An addition and a subtraction are allowed. DATETIME

All operations are allowed.

Note

If any of the date/time arguments contains NULL, NULL is returned.

Example

-- initial systimestamp value
SELECT SYSDATETIME;
  SYSDATETIME
===============================
  07:09:52.115 PM 01/14/2010
-- time type + 10(seconds) returns time type
SELECT (CAST (SYSDATETIME AS TIME) + 10);
 ( cast( SYS_DATETIME  as time)+10)
====================================
  07:10:02 PM
-- date type + 10 (days) returns date type
SELECT (CAST (SYSDATETIME AS DATE) + 10);
 ( cast( SYS_DATETIME  as date)+10)
====================================
  01/24/2010
-- timestamp type + 10(seconds) returns timestamp type
SELECT (CAST (SYSDATETIME AS TIMESTAMP) + 10);
 ( cast( SYS_DATETIME  as timestamp)+10)
=========================================
  07:10:02 PM 01/14/2010
-- systimestamp type + 10(milliseconds) returns systimestamp type
SELECT (SYSDATETIME  + 10);
 ( SYS_DATETIME +10)
===============================
  07:09:52.125 PM 01/14/2010
SELECT DATETIME '09/01/2009 03:30:30.001 pm'- TIMESTAMP '08/31/2009 03:30:30 pm';
 datetime '09/01/2009 03:30:30.001 pm'-timestamp '08/31/2009 03:30:30 pm'
=======================================
  86400001
SELECT TIMESTAMP '09/01/2009 03:30:30 pm'- TIMESTAMP '08/31/2009 03:30:30 pm';
 timestamp '09/01/2009 03:30:30 pm'-timestamp '08/31/2009 03:30:30 pm'
=======================================
  86400