The following lexical conventions for issuing SQL statements apply specifically to the Oracle Database implementation of SQL, but are generally acceptable in other SQL implementations.
When you issue a SQL statement, you can include one or more tabs, carriage returns, spaces, or comments anywhere a space occurs within the definition of the statement. Thus, Oracle Database evaluates the following two statements in the same manner:
SELECT last_name,salary*12,MONTHS_BETWEEN(SYSDATE,hire_date) FROM employees WHERE department_id = 30 ORDER BY last_name; SELECT last_name, salary * 12, MONTHS_BETWEEN( SYSDATE, hire_date ) FROM employees WHERE department_id=30 ORDER BY last_name;
Case is insignificant in reserved words, keywords, identifiers, and parameters. However, case is significant in text literals and quoted names. Refer to "Text Literals" for a syntax description of text literals.
Note:
SQL statements are terminated differently in different programming environments. This documentation set uses the default SQL*Plus character, the semicolon (;).