In relational databases a virtual column is a table column whose value(s) is automatically computed using other columns values, or another deterministic expression. Virtual columns are defined of as Generated Column,[1] and are only implemented by some DBMSs, like MariaDB, SQL Server, Oracle, PostgreSQL, SQLite and Firebird (database server) (COMPUTED BY syntax).
There are two types of virtual columns:
Virtual columns values are computed on the fly when needed, for example when they are returned by a SELECT statement. Persistent column values are computed when a row is inserted in a table, and they are written like all other values. They can change if other values change. Both virtual and persistent columns have advantages and disadvantages: virtual columns don't consume space on the disk, but they must be computed every time a query refers to them; persistent columns don't require any CPU time, but they consume disk space. However, sometimes a choice is not available, because some DBMS's support only one column type (or neither of them).
IBM Db2 supports Virtual column of Version 8 as Generated column.[2]
MariaDB is a MySQL fork. Virtual columns were added in the 5.2 tree.[3]
Expressions that can be used to compute the virtual columns have the following limitations:
Persistent columns can be indexed and can be part of a foreign key, with a few small limitations concerning constraint enforcement.
Virtual columns can only be used on tables which use a storage engine which supports them. Storage engines supporting virtual columns are:
MRG_MyISAM tables can be based on MyISAM tables which include persistent columns; but the corresponding MRG_MyISAM column should be defined as a regular column.
A CREATE TABLE or ALTER TABLE statement can be used to add a virtual column. The syntax used to define a virtual column is the following:
Support for virtual columns, known in MySQL as generated columns, started becoming available in MySQL 5.7. Various limitations on their use have been relaxed in subsequent versions.[4]
Since version 11g, Oracle supports virtual columns.[5]
Microsoft SQL Server supports virtual columns, but they are called Computed Columns.[6]
SQL Server supports both persisted and non-persisted computed columns.
Firebird has always supported virtual columns as its precursor InterBase supports it, called Computed Columns.[7]
Firebird supports virtual columns, not persistent ones and allows for sub-selects, calling built in functions, external functions and stored routines in the virtual column expression.
Creating a virtual column can be done during table creation or when adding columns to an existing table. The syntax used to define a virtual column is the following:
Since version 12, PostgreSQL supports virtual columns, known as generated columns.[8]
Since version 3.31.0 (2020-01-22), SQLite supports virtual columns, known as generated columns.[9]