Tuesday, May 15, 2007

Implicitly Hidden Columns [DB2 9 for z/OS]

Another nice new feature deep in the bowels of DB2 9 for z/OS is the ability to hide columns from the SELECT * statement. As far back as anyone can remember the advice has been given to avoid using SELECT * in application programs. But I still see it every now and then.

Now don't get me wrong, SELECT * is a nice shorthand when you are writing quick & dirty SQL using SPUFI or some other ad hoc SQL tool. But it does not belong in your application programs because a subsequent ALTER to add a column will cause the program to fail because there are now more columns being returned than the programmer coded into the program.

"OK," you may be asking, "so what? I thought you were writing about DB2 9 here?" Fair enough. DB2 9 for z/OS adds the ability to code IMPLICITLY HIDDEN on the column specification of a CREATE or ALTER TABLE statement. By coding IMPLICITYLY HIDDEN, the column will not be visible in the result of a SQL statement unless you explicitly refer to the column by name. So, SELECT * will not return any implicitly hidden columns to the result set.

For example, in the following table C2 is implicitly hidden and will not be returned as the result of SELECT *:

CREATE TABLE T1
(C1 SMALLINT NOT NULL,
C2 CHAR(10) IMPLICITLY HIDDEN,
C3 TIMESTAMP)
IN DB.TS;

This has some obvious beneifts. First of all, if you are one of those shops where programmers did not follow the no SELECT * in programs rule, then you can simply add every new column with the IMPLICITLY HIDDEN attribute and those SELECT * statements will keep on running because they won't see the new columns.

Or, you might want to take a more comprehensive approach, and specify every column (except one, perhaps the key) of every new (or modified) table as IMPLICITLY HIDDEN. If every column except the key is hidden, then a SELECT * won't return anything except the key - you'll have to explicitly specify all of those other columns to get them into your result sets. Of course, this negates the ability to use SELECT * for quick & dirty SPUFI queries because implicitly hidden columns will be hidden there, too.

There are a few caveats on the usage of IMPLICITLY HIDDEN. You cannot specify IMPLICITLY HIDDEN for a column that is defined as a ROWID, or a distinct type that is based on a ROWID. Additionally, IMPLICITLY HIDDEN must not be specified for all columns of a table.

2 comments:

  1. Anonymous7:43 AM

    Hi there,

    I am currently trying to "hide" columns like you explain in your post, but not in a regular table but in a View. Unfortunately the syntax does not seem to work the same way with Views, "implicitly hidden".

    Not sure if this is the right place to ask, but maybe you have some ideas here?

    Best Regards, S.

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  2. IMPLICITLY HIDDEN works for tables, not for views. If you want to hide columns in a view, just do not include the column in the view creation. Of course, this is not exactly the same as implicitly hiding the column because if the column is not in the view at all, nobody can access the column using the view with SELECT * or any type of SELECT.

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