In Oracle/PLSQL, the rtrim function removes all specified characters from the right-hand side of a string.
Syntax
The syntax for the rtrim function is:
rtrim( string1, [ trim_string ] )
string1 is the string to trim the characters from the right-hand side.
trim_string is the string that will be removed from the right-hand side of string1. If this parameter is omitted, the rtrim function will remove all trailing spaces from string1.
Applies To
- Oracle 11g, Oracle 10g, Oracle 9i, Oracle 8i
For Example
rtrim('tech '); | would return 'tech' |
rtrim('tech ', ' '); | would return 'tech' |
rtrim('123000', '0'); | would return '123' |
rtrim('Tech123123', '123'); | would return 'Tech' |
rtrim('123Tech123', '123'); | would return '123Tech' |
rtrim('Techxyxzyyy', 'xyz'); | would return 'Tech' |
rtrim('Tech6372', '0123456789'); | would return 'Tech' |
The rtrim function may appear to remove patterns, but this is not the case as demonstrated in the following example.
rtrim('Techxyxxyzyyyxx', 'xyz'); | would return 'Tech' |
It actually removes the individual occurrences of 'x', 'y', and 'z', as opposed to the pattern of 'xyz'.
The rtrim function can also be used to remove all trailing numbers as demonstrated in the next example.
rtrim('Tech6372', '0123456789'); | would return 'Tech' |
In this example, every number combination from 0 to 9 has been listed in the trim_string parameter. By doing this, it does not matter the order that the numbers appear in string1, all trailing numbers will be removed by the rtrim function.