8.9. Conditional Functions
8.9.1. COALESCE()
Available in
DSQL, PSQL
Syntax
COALESCE (<exp1>, <exp2> [, <expN> ... ])
Parameter | Description |
---|---|
exp1, exp2 … expN | A list of expressions of any compatible types |
Result type
Depends on input.
Description
The COALESCE
function takes two or more arguments and returns the value of the first non-NULL
argument. If all the arguments evaluate to NULL
, the result is NULL
.
Example
This example picks the Nickname
from the Persons
table. If it happens to be NULL
, it goes on to FirstName
. If that too is NULL
, “'Mr./Mrs.'
” is used. Finally, it adds the family name. All in all, it tries to use the available data to compose a full name that is as informal as possible. Notice that this scheme only works if absent nicknames and first names are really NULL
: if one of them is an empty string instead, COALESCE
will happily return that to the caller.
select
coalesce (Nickname, FirstName, 'Mr./Mrs.') || ' ' || LastName
as FullName
from Persons
See also
8.9.2. DECODE()
Available in
DSQL, PSQL
Syntax
DECODE(<testexpr>,
<expr1>, <result1>
[<expr2>, <result2> …]
[, <defaultresult>])
The equivalent CASE
construct:
CASE <testexpr>
WHEN <expr1> THEN <result1>
[WHEN <expr2> THEN <result2> …]
[ELSE <defaultresult>]
END
Parameter | Description |
---|---|
testexpr | An expression of any compatible type that is compared to the expressions expr1, expr2 … exprN |
expr1, expr2, … exprN | Expressions of any compatible types, to which the testexpr expression is compared |
result1, result2, … resultN | Returned values of any type |
defaultresult | The expression to be returned if none of the conditions is met |
Result type
Varies
Description
DECODE
is a shorthand for the so-called “simple CASE
” construct, in which a given expression is compared to a number of other expressions until a match is found. The result is determined by the value listed after the matching expression. If no match is found, the default result is returned, if present. Otherwise, NULL
is returned.
Matching is done with the ‘ |
Example
select name,
age,
decode(upper(sex),
'M', 'Male',
'F', 'Female',
'Unknown'),
religion
from people
See also
8.9.3. IIF()
Available in
DSQL, PSQL
Syntax
IIF (<condition>, ResultT, ResultF)
Parameter | Description |
---|---|
condition | A true|false expression |
resultT | The value returned if the condition is true |
resultF | The value returned if the condition is false |
Result type
Depends on input.
Description
IIF
takes three arguments. If the first evaluates to true
, the second argument is returned; otherwise the third is returned.
IIF
could be likened to the ternary “?:
” operator in C-like languages.
Example
select iif( sex = 'M', 'Sir', 'Madam' ) from Customers
|
See also
8.9.4. MAXVALUE()
Available in
DSQL, PSQL
Syntax
MAXVALUE (<expr1> [, ... , <exprN> ])
Parameter | Description |
---|---|
expr1 … exprN | List of expressions of compatible types |
Result type
Varies according to input — result will be of the same data type as the first expression in the list (expr1).
Description
Returns the maximum value from a list of numerical, string, or date/time expressions. This function fully supports text BLOB
s of any length and character set.
- If one or more expressions resolve to
NULL
,MAXVALUE
returnsNULL
. This behaviour differs from the aggregate functionMAX
.
Example
SELECT MAXVALUE(PRICE_1, PRICE_2) AS PRICE
FROM PRICELIST
See also
8.9.5. MINVALUE()
Available in
DSQL, PSQL
Syntax
MINVALUE (<expr1> [, ... , <exprN> ])
Parameter | Description |
---|---|
expr1 … exprN | List of expressions of compatible types |
Result type
Varies according to input — result will be of the same data type as the first expression in the list (expr1).
Description
Returns the minimum value from a list of numerical, string, or date/time expressions. This function fully supports text BLOB
s of any length and character set.
- If one or more expressions resolve to
NULL
,MINVALUE
returnsNULL
. This behaviour differs from the aggregate functionMIN
.
Example
SELECT MINVALUE(PRICE_1, PRICE_2) AS PRICE
FROM PRICELIST
See also
8.9.6. NULLIF()
Available in
DSQL, PSQL
Syntax
NULLIF (<exp1>, <exp2>)
Parameter | Description |
---|---|
exp1 | An expression |
exp2 | Another expression of a data type compatible with exp1 |
Description
NULLIF
returns the value of the first argument, unless it is equal to the second. In that case, NULL
is returned.
Result type
Depends on input.
Example
select avg( nullif(Weight, -1) ) from FatPeople
This will return the average weight of the persons listed in FatPeople, excluding those having a weight of -1, since AVG
skips NULL
data. Presumably, -1 indicates “weight unknown” in this table. A plain AVG(Weight)
would include the -1 weights, thus skewing the result.
See also