Table of Contents

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  1. Preface
  2. Informatica Developer
  3. The Model Repository
  4. Searches in Informatica Developer
  5. Connections
  6. Physical Data Objects
  7. Flat File Data Objects
  8. Logical View of Data
  9. Viewing Data
  10. Application Deployment
  11. Application Patch Deployment
  12. Application Patch Deployment Example
  13. Continuous Integration and Continuous Delivery (CI/CD)
  14. Object Import and Export
  15. Appendix A: Data Type Reference
  16. Appendix B: Keyboard Shortcuts
  17. Appendix C: Connection Properties

Developer Tool Guide

Developer Tool Guide

Delimited Identifiers

Delimited Identifiers

Delimited identifiers must be enclosed within delimited characters because they do not comply with the format rules for identifiers.
Databases can use the following types of delimited identifiers:
Identifiers that use reserved keywords
If an identifier uses a reserved keyword, you must enclose the identifier within delimited characters in an SQL query. For example, the following SQL statement accesses a table named
ORDER
:
SELECT * FROM “ORDER” WHERE MYCOLUMN = 10
Identifiers that use special characters
If an identifier uses special characters, you must enclose the identifier within delimited characters in an SQL query. For example, the following SQL statement accesses a table named
MYTABLE$@
:
SELECT * FROM “MYTABLE$@” WHERE MYCOLUMN = 10
Case-sensitive identifiers
By default, identifiers in IBM DB2, Microsoft SQL Server, and Oracle databases are not case sensitive. Database object names are stored in uppercase, but SQL queries can use any case to refer to them. For example, the following SQL statements access the table named
MYTABLE
:
SELECT * FROM mytable SELECT * FROM MyTable SELECT * FROM MYTABLE
To use case-sensitive identifiers, you must enclose the identifier within delimited characters in an SQL query. For example, the following SQL statement accesses a table named
MyTable
:
SELECT * FROM “MyTable” WHERE MYCOLUMN = 10

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