Add some numbers in front of a column - sql

I have a column in SQL server and I want to add 7 for the words which begin by a and add 8 for the words which begin by t.
Here is my column:
add-on
above
tv
their
french
And I want this:
7add-on
7above
8tv
8their
french
I am looking for a query which could do that.
Thank you very much!

You can use left() & do the concatenation :
select t.*,
(case left(col, 1)
when 'a' then concat(7, col)
when 't' then concat(8, col)
else col
end)
from table t;

Use a case expression with substring to get the results you require.
select concat(
(case when substring(col,1,1)='a' then '7'
when substring(col,1,1)='t' then '8'
end
)
,col
) as modified_col
from table

You need 2 update queries. Try like:
UPDATE myTable SET myColumn='7'+myColumn WHERE myColumn LIKE 'a%';
UPDATE myTable SET myColumn='8'+myColumn WHERE myColumn LIKE 't%'

Use CASE statement to check the first char, returned by SUBSTRING function, and calculate a prefix to add to your data:
select
case substring(column, 1, 1)
when 'a' then '7'
when 't' then '8' else '' end + column as NewColumn
from table

In sql server 2008 :
select
case when substring(column,1,1)='a' then ( '7 ' + column)
case when substring(column,1,1)='t' then ( '8 ' + column)
else column end as column from table
In sql server 2012 or above :
select
case when substring(column,1,1)='a' then concat( '7 ',column)
case when substring(column,1,1)='t' then concat( '8 ',column)
else column end as column from table

Related

Snowflake Substring Concat Issue: Numeric value '' is not recognized

Have a fiscal quarter column, and I want to add a column that displays the previous quarter in the same row. I've done this successfully in tableau with logic like below.
IF RIGHT([current_qtr], 1) = "1"
THEN LEFT([current_qtr],2)+ STR(INT(MID([current_qtr], 3,2)) -1) +"Q4"
ELSE LEFT([current_qtr],5)+ STR(INT(RIGHT([current_qtr],1)) -1)
END
Example of expected output in snowflake
current_qtr
previous_qtr
other columns
FY21Q1
FY20Q4
etc
FY21Q2
FY21Q1
etc
When I try to do this in snowflake though I keep getting this "Numeric value '' is not recognized error instead. Any ideas how to fix? Below is what I attempted.
SELECT *,
CASE
WHEN SUBSTR(p.current_qtr,5,1) = 1
THEN SUBSTR(p.current_qtr,1,2) || TRY_CAST(SUBSTR(p.current_qtr,3,2) as INTEGER)-1 || 'Q4'
ELSE SUBSTR(p.current_qtr,5,1) || TRY_CAST(SUBSTR(p.current_qtr,3,2) as INTEGER)-1
End As prev_qtr
FROM table as p
This logic might look way better as a SQL UDF than as a big pile of strange SQL inside a query:
create or replace function prev_quarter_formatted(x string)
returns string
as
$$
(
select 'FY' || to_varchar(prev_q, '%y') || 'Q' || quarter(prev_q)
from (
select substr(x, 3,2) year
, (1+3*(substr(x, 6,1)::int-1)) q_to_month
, to_date(year||'-'||q_to_month||'-01', 'yy-mm-dd') as_date
, dateadd(month, -3, as_date) prev_q
)
)
$$
;
select prev_quarter_formatted('FY21Q1') a
;
Notice that for the logic I transformed the quarter into a date, subtracted 3 months, and formatted again.
There are some subtle differences in the syntax for casting. You can use your current CASE statement with some minor adjustments:
SELECT *,
CASE
WHEN SUBSTR(p.current_qtr,6,1) = '1'
THEN SUBSTR(p.current_qtr,1,2) || ((SUBSTR(p.current_qtr,3,2))::int - 1) || 'Q4'
ELSE SUBSTR(p.current_qtr,1,2) || SUBSTR(p.current_qtr,3,2) || (SUBSTR(p.current_qtr,3,2)::int-1)
END AS prev_qtr
FROM table1 as p

SQL Replace a minus number with brackets

I have a column of financial data that shows. Some figures are positive and some are negative.
Is it possible to change a number like -945 to (945) this is on SQL Server 2005.
The following expression should work for most cases:
SELECT num, CASE
WHEN num < 0 THEN '(' + CAST(-num AS VARCHAR(11)) + ')'
ELSE CAST(num AS VARCHAR(11))
END AS frmtd
FROM (
SELECT 0 AS num UNION ALL
SELECT 945 UNION ALL
SELECT -945
) tests
There is an SQL function called ABS() that basically changes negative and positive numbers to just their relative value from 0, meaning it removes the minus but doesn't affect positive values.
You can find out more about it here
You can also try using Replace function in Sql Server as shown below.
When value is in (-) ve.
Select CAST(REPLACE(CAST(-945 as Varchar(4)), '-', '') as Int)
When value is already in (+) ve.
Select CAST(REPLACE(CAST(945 as Varchar(4)), '-', '') as Int)
The output in both case will be: 945

Select Statement that returns a result where the text characters contains only 0s or only 9s but length doesn't matter

I'm trying to write a select statement that returns column A when column B contains '0' or '9' or '00' or '99' or '000' or '999' and so forth. The values are TEXT. Any help is appreciated!
You could use:
SELECT colA
FROM tab
WHERE REPLACE(colB, '9', '') = ''
OR REPLACE(colB, '0', '') = '';
DBFiddle Demo
SELECT *
FROM tab
WHERE col like '%9%' or col like '%0%'

Count the Null columns in a row in SQL

I was wondering about the possibility to count the null columns of row in SQL, I have a table Customer that has nullable values, simply I want a query that return an int of the number of null columns for certain row(certain customer).
This method assigns a 1 or 0 for null columns, and adds them all together. Hopefully you don't have too many nullable columns to add up here...
SELECT
((CASE WHEN col1 IS NULL THEN 1 ELSE 0 END)
+ (CASE WHEN col2 IS NULL THEN 1 ELSE 0 END)
+ (CASE WHEN col3 IS NULL THEN 1 ELSE 0 END)
...
...
+ (CASE WHEN col10 IS NULL THEN 1 ELSE 0 END)) AS sum_of_nulls
FROM table
WHERE Customer=some_cust_id
Note, you can also do this perhaps a little more syntactically cleanly with IF() if your RDBMS supports it.
SELECT
(IF(col1 IS NULL, 1, 0)
+ IF(col2 IS NULL, 1, 0)
+ IF(col3 IS NULL, 1, 0)
...
...
+ IF(col10 IS NULL, 1, 0)) AS sum_of_nulls
FROM table
WHERE Customer=some_cust_id
I tested this pattern against a table and it appears to work properly.
My answer builds on Michael Berkowski's answer, but to avoid having to type out hundreds of column names, what I did was this:
Step 1: Get a list of all of the columns in your table
SELECT COLUMN_NAME FROM INFORMATION_SCHEMA.COLUMNS WHERE TABLE_NAME = 'myTable';
Step 2: Paste the list in Notepad++ (any editor that supports regular expression replacement will work). Then use this replacement pattern
Search:
^(.*)$
Replace:
\(CASE WHEN \1 IS NULL THEN 1 ELSE 0 END\) +
Step 3: Prepend SELECT identityColumnName, and change the very last + to AS NullCount FROM myTable and optionally add an ORDER BY...
SELECT
identityColumnName,
(CASE WHEN column001 IS NULL THEN 1 ELSE 0 END) +
-- ...
(CASE WHEN column200 IS NULL THEN 1 ELSE 0 END) AS NullCount
FROM
myTable
ORDER BY
NullCount DESC
For ORACLE-DBMS only.
You can use the NVL2 function:
NVL2( string1, value_if_not_null, value_if_null )
Here is a select with a similiar approach as Michael Berkowski suggested:
SELECT (NVL2(col1, 0, 1)
+ NVL2(col2, 0, 1)
+ NVL2(col3, 0, 1)
...
...
+ NVL2(col10, 0, 1)
) AS sum_of_nulls
FROM table
WHERE Customer=some_cust_id
A more generic approach would be to write a PL/SQL-block and use dynamic SQL. You have to build a SELECT string with the NVL2 method from above for every column in the all_tab_columns of a specific table.
Unfortunately, in a standard SQL statement you will have to enter each column you want to test, to test all programatically you could use T-SQL. A word of warning though, ensure you are working with genuine NULLS, you can have blank stored values that the database will not recognise as a true NULL (I know this sounds strange).
You can avoid this by capturing the blank values and the NULLS in a statement like this:
CASE WHEN col1 & '' = '' THEN 1 ELSE 0 END
Or in some databases such as Oracle (not sure if there are any others) you would use:
CASE WHEN col1 || '' = '' THEN 1 ELSE 0 END
You don't state RDBMS. For SQL Server 2008...
SELECT CustomerId,
(SELECT COUNT(*) - COUNT(C)
FROM (VALUES(CAST(Col1 AS SQL_VARIANT)),
(Col2),
/*....*/
(Col9),
(Col10)) T(C)) AS NumberOfNulls
FROM Customer
Depending on what you want to do, and if you ignore mavens, and if you use SQL Server 2012, you could to it another way. .
The total number of candidate columns ("slots") must be known.
1. Select all the known "slots" column by column (they're known).
2. Unpivot that result to get a
table with one row per original column. This works because the null columns don't
unpivot, and you know all the column names.
3. Count(*) the result to get the number of non-nulls;
subtract from that to get your answer.
Like this, for 4 "seats" in a car
select 'empty seats' = 4 - count(*)
from
(
select carId, seat1,seat2,seat3,seat4 from cars where carId = #carId
) carSpec
unpivot (FieldValue FOR seat in ([seat1],[seat2],[seat3],[seat4])) AS results
This is useful if you may need to do more later than just count the number of non-null columns, as it gives you a way to manipulate the columns as a set too.
This will give you the number of columns which are not null. you can apply this appropriately
SELECT ISNULL(COUNT(col1),'') + ISNULL(COUNT(col2),'') +ISNULL(COUNT(col3),'')
FROM TABLENAME
WHERE ID=1
The below script gives you the NULL value count within a row i.e. how many columns do not have values.
{SELECT
*,
(SELECT COUNT(*)
FROM (VALUES (Tab.Col1)
,(Tab.Col2)
,(Tab.Col3)
,(Tab.Col4)) InnerTab(Col)
WHERE Col IS NULL) NullColumnCount
FROM (VALUES(1,2,3,4)
,(NULL,2,NULL,4)
,(1,NULL,NULL,NULL)) Tab(Col1,Col2,Col3,Col4) }
Just to demonstrate I am using an inline table in my example.
Try to cast or convert all column values to a common type it will help you to compare the column of different type.
I haven't tested it yet, but I'd try to do it using a PL\SQL function
CREATE OR REPLACE TYPE ANYARRAY AS TABLE OF ANYDATA
;
CREATE OR REPLACE Function COUNT_NULL
( ARR IN ANYARRAY )
RETURN number
IS
cnumber number ;
BEGIN
for i in 1 .. ARR.count loop
if ARR(i).column_value is null then
cnumber := cnumber + 1;
end if;
end loop;
RETURN cnumber;
EXCEPTION
WHEN OTHERS THEN
raise_application_error
(-20001,'An error was encountered - '
||SQLCODE||' -ERROR- '||SQLERRM);
END
;
Then use it in a select query like this
CREATE TABLE TEST (A NUMBER, B NUMBER, C NUMBER);
INSERT INTO TEST (NULL,NULL,NULL);
INSERT INTO TEST (1 ,NULL,NULL);
INSERT INTO TEST (1 ,2 ,NULL);
INSERT INTO TEST (1 ,2 ,3 );
SELECT ROWNUM,COUNT_NULL(A,B,C) AS NULL_COUNT FROM TEST;
Expected output
ROWNUM | NULL_COUNT
-------+-----------
1 | 3
2 | 2
3 | 1
4 | 0
This is how i tried
CREATE TABLE #temptablelocal (id int NOT NULL, column1 varchar(10) NULL, column2 varchar(10) NULL, column3 varchar(10) NULL, column4 varchar(10) NULL, column5 varchar(10) NULL, column6 varchar(10) NULL);
INSERT INTO #temptablelocal
VALUES (1,
NULL,
'a',
NULL,
'b',
NULL,
'c')
SELECT *
FROM #temptablelocal
WHERE id =1
SELECT count(1) countnull
FROM
(SELECT a.ID,
b.column_title,
column_val = CASE b.column_title
WHEN 'column1' THEN a.column1
WHEN 'column2' THEN a.column2
WHEN 'column3' THEN a.column3
WHEN 'column4' THEN a.column4
WHEN 'column5' THEN a.column5
WHEN 'column6' THEN a.column6
END
FROM
( SELECT id,
column1,
column2,
column3,
column4,
column5,
column6
FROM #temptablelocal
WHERE id =1 ) a
CROSS JOIN
( SELECT 'column1'
UNION ALL SELECT 'column2'
UNION ALL SELECT 'column3'
UNION ALL SELECT 'column4'
UNION ALL SELECT 'column5'
UNION ALL SELECT 'column6' ) b (column_title) ) AS pop WHERE column_val IS NULL
DROP TABLE #temptablelocal
Similary, but dynamically:
drop table if exists myschema.table_with_nulls;
create table myschema.table_with_nulls as
select
n1::integer,
n2::integer,
n3::integer,
n4::integer,
c1::character varying,
c2::character varying,
c3::character varying,
c4::character varying
from
(
values
(1,2,3,4,'a','b','c','d'),
(1,2,3,null,'a','b','c',null),
(1,2,null,null,'a','b',null,null),
(1,null,null,null,'a',null,null,null)
) as test_records(n1, n2, n3, n4, c1, c2, c3, c4);
drop function if exists myschema.count_nulls(varchar,varchar);
create function myschema.count_nulls(schemaname varchar, tablename varchar) returns void as
$BODY$
declare
calc varchar;
sqlstring varchar;
begin
select
array_to_string(array_agg('(' || trim(column_name) || ' is null)::integer'),' + ')
into
calc
from
information_schema.columns
where
table_schema in ('myschema')
and table_name in ('table_with_nulls');
sqlstring = 'create temp view count_nulls as select *, ' || calc || '::integer as count_nulls from myschema.table_with_nulls';
execute sqlstring;
return;
end;
$BODY$ LANGUAGE plpgsql STRICT;
select * from myschema.count_nulls('myschema'::varchar,'table_with_nulls'::varchar);
select
*
from
count_nulls;
Though I see that I didn't finish parametising the function.
My answer builds on Drew Chapin's answer, but with changes to get the result using a single script:
use <add_database_here>;
Declare #val Varchar(MAX);
Select #val = COALESCE(#val + str, str) From
(SELECT
'(CASE WHEN '+COLUMN_NAME+' IS NULL THEN 1 ELSE 0 END) +' str
FROM INFORMATION_SCHEMA.COLUMNS WHERE TABLE_NAME = '<add table name here>'
) t1 -- getting column names and adding the case when to replace NULLs for zeros or ones
Select #val = SUBSTRING(#val,1,LEN(#val) - 1) -- removing trailling add sign
Select #val = 'SELECT <add_identity_column_here>, ' + #val + ' AS NullCount FROM <add table name here>' -- adding the 'select' for the column identity, the 'alias' for the null count column, and the 'from'
EXEC (#val) --executing the resulting sql
With ORACLE:
Number_of_columns - json_value( json_array( comma separated list of columns ), '$.size()' ) from your_table
json_array will build an array with only the non null columns and the json_query expression will give you the size of the array
There isn't a straightforward way of doing so like there would be with counting rows. Basically, you have to enumerate all the columns that might be null in one expression.
So for a table with possibly null columns a, b, c, you could do this:
SELECT key_column, COALESCE(a,0) + COALESCE(b,0) + COALESCE(c,0) null_col_count
FROM my_table

Sorting alphanumeric data

Hi i want to sort alphanumeric data in ascending order .
data like this :
1mac , apple , dom , 007bind , pcworld , 8basic , nothing.
But here I want the result such as :
apple, dom ,nothing, pcworld , 007bind , 1mac , 8basic
can anyone tell me the sql query to show such result.
Any help will be appreciated.
Thanks In Advance..
SELECT your_field FROM your_table ORDER BY (your_field + 0 <> 0 OR your_field = '0') ASC, your_field + 0, your_field
You have to check if your database vendor supports such a collation and set the collation accordingly.
http://www.collation-charts.org
E.g. oracle has http://www.collation-charts.org/oracle10g/ora10g.CL8MSWIN1251.GENERIC_BASELETTER.html
Here's one way to do it:
select col from sometable where left(col, 1) < '0' or left(col, 1) > '9' order by col
union all
select col from sometable where left(col, 1) >= '0' and left(col, 1) <= '9' order by col