MASK_FIRST_N

Returns a masked version of a string with the first num_chars characters masked. By default, if you do not provide a mask value, the first four characters are masked.

Syntax

MASK_FIRST_N(expression varchar, num_chars int, uc_mask varchar, lc_mask varchar, num_mask varchar) → varchar

  • expression: The string to mask.

  • num_chars: The number of characters to mask.

  • uc_mask: Controls the mask character for upper case letters.

  • lc_mask: Controls the mask character for lower case letters.

  • num_mask: Controls the mask character for numbers.

Examples

MASK_FIRST_N example
SELECT MASK_FIRST_N('abcd-ABCD-1234')
-- xxxx-ABCD-1234
MASK_FIRST_N example containing optional mask value.
SELECT MASK_FIRST_N('abcd-ABCD-1234', 2)
-- xxcd-ABCD-1234
MASK_FIRST_N example containing optional arguments.
SELECT MASK_FIRST_N('Aa12-ABCD-1234', 4, 'U', 'u', '#')
-- Uu##-ABCD-1234

Usage Notes

By default, upper case letters are converted to X, lower case letters are converted to x, and numbers are converted to n. You can override the characters used in the mask by supplying optional arguments. The second argument controls the mask character for upper case letters, the third argument for lower case letters, and the fourth argument for numbers.

Last updated