In Oracle/PLSQL, the instr function returns the location of a substring in a string.
The syntax for the instr Oracle function is:
instr( string1, string2 [, start_position [, nth_appearance ] ] )
string1 is the string to search.
string2 is the substring to search for in string1.
start_position is the position in string1 where the search will start. This argument is optional. If omitted, it defaults to 1. The first position in the string is 1. If the start_position is negative, the function counts back start_position number of characters from the end of string1 and then searches towards the beginning of string1.
nth_appearance is the nth appearance of string2. This is optional. If omitted, it defaults to 1.
Note:
If string2 is not found in string1, then the instr Oracle function will return 0.
Applies To:
- Oracle 8i, Oracle 9i, Oracle 10g, Oracle 11g
For example:
instr('Tech on the net', 'e') | would return 2; the first occurrence of 'e' |
instr('Tech on the net', 'e', 1, 1) | would return 2; the first occurrence of 'e' |
instr('Tech on the net', 'e', 1, 2) | would return 11; the second occurrence of 'e' |
instr('Tech on the net', 'e', 1, 3) | would return 14; the third occurrence of 'e' |
instr('Tech on the net', 'e', -3, 2) | would return 2. |