Standard Language Support Mode - Teradata Vantage

Teradata® VantageCloud Lake

Deployment
VantageCloud
Edition
Lake
Product
Teradata Vantage
Published
January 2023
Language
English (United States)
Last Update
2024-04-03
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For those familiar with Teradata Vantage™, VantageCloud Lake uses Standard Language Support Mode, and stores:
  • Object names in the Data Dictionary using the UNICODE server character set
  • User data in Analytics Database using the LATIN server character set.
    You can override the global data storage default by specifying a different default character set for individual users and table columns. See Specifying the Default Server Character Set.

For the standard language support mode, the default server character set for user DBC is also LATIN.

Standard Language LATIN Character Coding

Standard language support provides VantageCloud Lake internal coding for the entire set of printable characters from the ISO 8859-1 (Latin1) and ISO 8859-15 (Latin9) standard, including diacritical marks such as ä, ñ, Ÿ, Œ, and œ, though the Z with caron in Latin9 is not supported. ASCII control characters are also supported for the standard language set.

For a definition of the Teradata LATIN character set used to represent ASCII and EBCDIC characters, see LATIN Server Character Set.

Compatible Languages

The LATIN server character set used in standard language support mode is sufficient to support the following languages.

International Languages That are Compatible with Standard Language Support
Albanian English Germanic Portuguese
Basque Estonian Greenlandic Rhaeto-Romantic
Breton Faroese Icelandic Romance
Catalonian Finnish Irish Gaelic (new orthography) Samoan
Celtic French Italian Scottish Gaelic
Cornish Frisian Latin Spanish
Danish Galician Luxemburgish Swahili
Dutch German Norwegian Swedish
For support of languages not shown in the preceding table, the server character set must be set to UNICODE for the default character set for users or table columns that require the special language support. See Specifying the Default Server Character Set. While LATIN supports these languages, the ASCII session character set does not. There are listed languages that require UTF8 or UTF16 session character sets.