Suppose you have defined two sourced UDFs on the built-in SUM function to support SUM on U.S. and Canadian dollars, similar to the UDF sourced on Euros in the Example: Sourced UDFs involving UDTs.
CREATE FUNCTION SUM (CANADIAN_DOLLAR) RETURNS CANADIAN_DOLLAR SOURCE SYSIBM.SUM (DECIMAL()) CREATE FUNCTION SUM (US_DOLLAR) RETURNS US_DOLLAR SOURCE SYSIBM.SUM (DECIMAL())
Now suppose your supervisor requests that you maintain the annual total sales in U.S. dollars of each product and in each country, in separate tables:
CREATE TABLE US_SALES_04 (PRODUCT_ITEM INTEGER, TOTAL US_DOLLAR) CREATE TABLE GERMAN_SALES_04 (PRODUCT_ITEM INTEGER, TOTAL US_DOLLAR) CREATE TABLE CANADIAN_SALES_04 (PRODUCT_ITEM INTEGER, TOTAL US_DOLLAR) INSERT INTO US_SALES_04 SELECT PRODUCT_ITEM, SUM (TOTAL) FROM US_SALES WHERE YEAR = 2004 GROUP BY PRODUCT_ITEM INSERT INTO GERMAN_SALES_04 SELECT PRODUCT_ITEM, US_DOLLAR (SUM (TOTAL)) FROM GERMAN_SALES WHERE YEAR = 2004 GROUP BY PRODUCT_ITEM INSERT INTO CANADIAN_SALES_04 SELECT PRODUCT_ITEM, US_DOLLAR (SUM (TOTAL)) FROM CANADIAN_SALES WHERE YEAR = 2004 GROUP BY PRODUCT_ITEM
You explicitly cast the amounts in Canadian dollars and Euros to U.S. dollars since different UDTs are not directly assignable to each other. You cannot use the cast specification syntax because UDTs can only be cast to their own source type.