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Sergio Peña commented on HIVE-7373: ----------------------------------- It will preserve the trailing zeros up to the scale allows. For instance: 0 in decimal(5,4) would be 0 0.0 in decimal(5,4) would be 0.0 0.00 in decimal(5,4) would be 0.00 0.00000000 in decimal(5,4) would be 0.0000 Is that correct [~xuefuz] ? > Hive should not remove trailing zeros for decimal numbers > --------------------------------------------------------- > > Key: HIVE-7373 > URL: https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/HIVE-7373 > Project: Hive > Issue Type: Bug > Components: Types > Affects Versions: 0.13.0, 0.13.1 > Reporter: Xuefu Zhang > Assignee: Xuefu Zhang > > Currently Hive blindly removes trailing zeros of a decimal input number as > sort of standardization. This is questionable in theory and problematic in > practice. > 1. In decimal context, number 3.140000 has a different semantic meaning from > number 3.14. Removing trailing zeroes makes the meaning lost. > 2. In a extreme case, 0.0 has (p, s) as (1, 1). Hive removes trailing zeros, > and then the number becomes 0, which has (p, s) of (1, 0). Thus, for a > decimal column of (1,1), input such as 0.0, 0.00, and so on becomes NULL > because the column doesn't allow a decimal number with integer part. > Therefore, I propose Hive preserve the trailing zeroes (up to what the scale > allows). With this, in above example, 0.0, 0.00, and 0.0000 will be > represented as 0.0 (precision=1, scale=1) internally. -- This message was sent by Atlassian JIRA (v6.2#6252)