8.2. Comparison Functions and Operators
Comparison Operators
Operator | Description |
---|---|
< | Less than |
> | Greater than |
<= | Less than or equal to |
>= | Greater than or equal to |
= | Equal |
<> | Not equal |
!= | Not equal (non-standard but popular syntax) |
Range Operator: BETWEEN
The BETWEEN
operator tests if a value is within a specified range. It uses the syntax value BETWEEN min AND max
:
SELECT 3 BETWEEN 2 AND 6;
The statement shown above is equivalent to the following statement:
SELECT 3 >= 2 AND 3 <= 6;
To test if a value does not fall within the specified range use NOT BETWEEN
:
SELECT 3 NOT BETWEEN 2 AND 6;
The statement shown above is equivalent to the following statement:
SELECT 3 < 2 OR 3 > 6;
The presence of NULL in a BETWEEN
or NOT BETWEEN
statement will result in the statement evaluating to NULL:
SELECT NULL BETWEEN 2 AND 4; -- null
SELECT 2 BETWEEN NULL AND 6; -- null
The BETWEEN
and NOT BETWEEN
operators can also be used to evaluate string arguments:
SELECT 'Paul' BETWEEN 'John' AND 'Ringo'; -- true
Not that the value, min, and max parameters to BETWEEN
and NOT BETWEEN
must be the same type. For example, Presto will produce an error if you ask it if John is between 2.3 and 35.2.
IS NULL and IS NOT NULL
The IS NULL
and IS NOT NULL
operators test whether a value is null (undefined). Both operators work for all data types.
Using NULL
with IS NULL
evaluates to true:
select NULL IS NULL; -- true
But any other constant does not:
SELECT 3.0 IS NULL; -- false
IS DISTINCT FROM and IS NOT DISTINCT FROM
In SQL a NULL
value signifies an unknown value, so any comparison involving a NULL
will produce NULL
. The IS DISTINCT FROM
and IS NOT DISTINCT FROM
operators treat NULL
as a known value and both operators guarantee either a true or false outcome even in the presence of NULL
input:
SELECT NULL IS DISTINCT FROM NULL; -- false
SELECT NULL IS NOT DISTINCT FROM NULL; -- true
In the example shown above, a NULL
value is not considered distinct from NULL
. When you are comparing values which may include NULL
use these operators to guarantee either a TRUE
or FALSE
result.
The following truth table demonstrate the handling of NULL
in IS DISTINCT FROM
and IS NOT DISTINCT FROM
:
a | b | a = b | a <> b | a DISTINCT b | a NOT DISTINCT b |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | 1 | TRUE | FALSE | FALSE | TRUE |
1 | 2 | FALSE | TRUE | TRUE | FALSE |
1 | NULL | NULL | NULL | TRUE | FALSE |
NULL | NULL | NULL | NULL | FALSE | TRUE |
GREATEST and LEAST
These functions are not in the SQL standard, but are a common extension. Like most other functions in Presto, they return null if any argument is null. Note that in some other databases, such as PostgreSQL, they only return null if all arguments are null.
The following types are supported: DOUBLE
, BIGINT
, VARCHAR
, TIMESTAMP
, TIMESTAMP WITH TIME ZONE
, DATE
greatest
(value1, value2, …, valueN) → [same as input]
Returns the largest of the provided values.
least
(value1, value2, …, valueN) → [same as input]
Returns the smallest of the provided values.
Quantified Comparison Predicates: ALL, ANY and SOME
The ALL
, ANY
and SOME
quantifiers can be used together with comparison operators in the following way:
expression operator quantifier ( subquery )
For example:
SELECT 'hello' = ANY (VALUES 'hello', 'world'); -- true
SELECT 21 < ALL (VALUES 19, 20, 21); -- false
SELECT 42 >= SOME (SELECT 41 UNION ALL SELECT 42 UNION ALL SELECT 43); -- true
Here are the meanings of some quantifier and comparison operator combinations:
Expression | Meaning |
---|---|
A = ALL (…) | Evaluates to true when A is equal to all values. |
A <> ALL (…) | Evaluates to true when A doesn’t match any value. |
A < ALL (…) | Evaluates to true when A is smaller than the smallest value. |
A = ANY (…) | Evaluates to true when A is equal to any of the values. This form is equivalent to A IN (…) . |
A <> ANY (…) | Evaluates to true when A doesn’t match one or more values. |
A < ANY (…) | Evaluates to true when A is smaller than the biggest value. |
ANY
and SOME
have the same meaning and can be used interchangeably.
LIKE
The LIKE operator is used to match a specified character pattern in a string. Patterns can contain regular characters as well as wildcards. Wildcard characters can be escaped using the single character specified for the ESCAPE parameter. Matching is case sensitive.
Syntax:
expression LIKE pattern [ ESCAPE 'escape_character' ]
if pattern
or escape_character
is null, the expression evaluates to null.
Wildcard | Representation |
---|---|
% | The percent sign represents zero, one, or multiple characters |
_ | The underscore represents a single character |
Examples:
SELECT * FROM (VALUES ('abc'), ('bcd'), ('cde')) AS t (name)
WHERE name LIKE '%b%'
--returns 'abc' and 'bcd'
SELECT * FROM (VALUES ('abc'), ('bcd'), ('cde')) AS t (name)
WHERE name LIKE '_b%'
--returns 'abc'
SELECT * FROM (VALUES ('abc'), ('bcd'), ('cde')) AS t (name)
WHERE name LIKE 'b%'
--returns 'bcd'
SELECT * FROM (VALUES ('abc'), ('bcd'), ('cde')) AS t (name)
WHERE name LIKE 'B%'
--returns nothing
SELECT * FROM (VALUES ('a_c'), ('_cd'), ('cde')) AS t (name)
WHERE name LIKE '%#_%' ESCAPE '#'
--returns 'a_c' and '_cd'
SELECT * FROM (VALUES ('a%c'), ('%cd'), ('cde')) AS t (name)
WHERE name LIKE '%#%%' ESCAPE '#'
--returns 'a%c' and '%cd'