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https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/DRILL-5419?page=com.atlassian.jira.plugin.system.issuetabpanels:comment-tabpanel&focusedCommentId=15987773#comment-15987773
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ASF GitHub Bot commented on DRILL-5419:
---------------------------------------

Github user jinfengni commented on a diff in the pull request:

    https://github.com/apache/drill/pull/819#discussion_r113812071
  
    --- Diff: common/src/main/java/org/apache/drill/common/types/Types.java ---
    @@ -636,43 +658,63 @@ public static String toString(final MajorType type) {
     
       /**
        * Get the <code>precision</code> of given type.
    -   * @param majorType
    -   * @return
    +   *
    +   * @param majorType major type
    +   * @return precision value
        */
       public static int getPrecision(MajorType majorType) {
    -    MinorType type = majorType.getMinorType();
    -
    -    if (type == MinorType.VARBINARY || type == MinorType.VARCHAR) {
    -      return 65536;
    -    }
    -
         if (majorType.hasPrecision()) {
           return majorType.getPrecision();
         }
     
    -    return 0;
    +    return isScalarStringType(majorType) ? MAX_VARCHAR_LENGTH : UNDEFINED;
    --- End diff --
    
    I believe what this PR tries to do is exactly as what you describe : derive 
length based on metadata. Such metadata comes from the function used , or the 
string literal.  For example, if you have a cast(some_input as varchar(20)), 
you will know the output type's max length is 20 (depending on the input, the 
output may only have values up to 15 characters).   
    
    The max length is different from what could be obtained from 
{{RecordBatchSizer}}. 


> Calculate return string length for literals & some string functions
> -------------------------------------------------------------------
>
>                 Key: DRILL-5419
>                 URL: https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/DRILL-5419
>             Project: Apache Drill
>          Issue Type: Bug
>    Affects Versions: 1.9.0
>            Reporter: Arina Ielchiieva
>            Assignee: Arina Ielchiieva
>         Attachments: version_with_cast.JPG
>
>
> Though Drill is schema-less and cannot determine in advance what the length 
> of the column should be but if query has an explicit type/length specified, 
> Drill should return correct column length.
> For example, JDBC / ODBC Driver is ALWAYS returning 64K as the length of a 
> varchar or char even if casts are applied.
> Changes:
> *LITERALS*
> String literals length is the same as actual literal length.
> Example: for 'aaa' return length is 3.
> *CAST*
> Return length is the one indicated in cast expression. This also applies when 
> user has created view where each string columns was casted to varchar with 
> some specific length.
> This length will be returned to the user without need to apply cast one more 
> time. Below mentioned functions can take leverage of underlying varchar 
> length and calculate return length.
> *LOWER, UPPER, INITCAP, REVERSE, FIRST_VALUE, LAST_VALUE* 
> Return length is underlying column length, i.e. if column is known, the same 
> length will be returned.
> Example:
> lower(cast(col as varchar(30))) will return 30.
> lower(col) will return max varchar length, since we don't know actual column 
> length.
> *LAG, LEAD*
> Return length is underlying column length but column type will be nullable.
> *LPAD, RPAD*
> Pads the string to the length specified. Return length is this specified 
> length. 
> *CONCAT, CONCAT OPERATOR (||)*
> Return length is sum of underlying columns length. If length is greater then 
> varchar max length,  varchar max length is returned.
> *SUBSTR, SUBSTRING, LEFT, RIGHT*
> Calculates return length according to each function substring rules, for 
> example, taking into account how many char should be substracted.
> *IF EXPRESSIONS (CASE STATEMENT, COALESCE), UNION OPERATOR*
> When combining string columns with different length, return length is max 
> from source columns.



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