Wasn't able to find a proper example of this (or maybe I am simply looking in wrong direction).
Depending on incoming parameter value I need to change WHERE condition for SELECT.
For example, I got parameter #bookType with value 'All' and I need to make something like this:
IF #bookType = 'All'
SELECT * FROM tBooks
WHERE BookType != 'Template' AND BookGroup='Library'
ELSE
SELECT * FROM tBooks
WHERE BookType = #bookType AND BookStatus=#bookStatus
Seems simple, but I need this IF inside WITH:
WITH Books AS (
IF...
...
), bookIds AS (
...
...
)
And this is not working because I am starting to receive 'Incorrect syntax near IF'. What exactly I am doing wrong? Or maybe it is possible to hide this IF inside WHERE statement (change where depending on parameter value)?
;
WITH Books AS (
SELECT * FROM tBooks
WHERE
(#BookType = 'All' AND BookType != 'Template' AND BookGroup='Library')
OR
(#BookType <> 'All' AND BookType = #bookType AND BookStatus=#bookStatus)
)
I'm running this code:
SELECT hID
FROM logonsHistory
WHERE aIDs NOT LIKE '%''101''%' AND
CASE src
WHEN 0 THEN
uID IN(29,41,42,45,49,50,57,73,83,107,166,349,356,367,375,376,416,471,472,473,474,481)
END
I get this error:
Incorrect syntax near the keyword 'IN'
I have no idea what's wrong.
A CASE statement is not appropriate in this case. Just use a simple OR condition:
SELECT hID
FROM logonsHistory
WHERE aIDs NOT LIKE '%''101''%'
AND (
src <> 0 -- add a COALESCE here if src can be NULL
OR uID IN(29,41,42,45,49,50,57,73,83,107,166,349,356,367,375,376,416,471,472,473,474,481)
)
... which basically is the equivalent of only applying the uID filtering if src = 0, which is what you appeared to be trying to accomplish with your query.
It sounds like you don't have to use CASE please test this
SELECT hID
FROM logonsHistory
WHERE aIDs NOT LIKE '%''101''%'
AND ( (src = 0 --scr is 0 => must have uid in the list
AND UID IN (29,41,42,45,49,50,57,73,83,107,166,349,356,367,375,376,416,471,472,473,474,481))
OR src <> 0) --else src is not 0 and there is no additional condition
i have a doubt on your not like condition have you tested it alone?
Guess this is what you are looking for
WHERE aIDs NOT LIKE '%''101''%' or
(
src = 0
AND
uID IN(29,41,42,45,49,50,57,73,83,107,166,349,356,367,375,376,416,471,472,473,474,481
)
It looks like your statement is not formatted properly. you placed a condition rather than a value to set within "When 0 then ...... END
the uID IN(29,41,42,45,49,50,57,73,83,107,166,349,356,367,375,376,416,471,472,473,474,481) you have there is a condition and shouldn't have been there
The when part of a case statement should select a single value. what you are trying to do is to check for a condition.
Or if you are checking for uid in those values, you should do
case when src = 0 then
case when uID IN (29,41,42,45,49,50,57,73,83,107,166,349,356,367,375,376,416,471,472,473,474,481)
then 'It is a Client ID'
-- add another when or else part here if required
end
else 'Not a UID and not a Client ID'
end
I'm having a Sql code like as follows
Select a.ItemCode, a.ItemDesc
From fn_BOM_Material_Master('A', #AsOnDate, #RptDate, #BranchID, #CompID)a
Left Outer Join fn_INV_AsOnDate_Stock(#StockDate, #AsOnDate, #RptDate, #BranchID, #CompID, #Finyear)b
On a.ItemCode=b.ItemCode and b.WarehouseCode<>'WAP'
and a.BranchID=b.BranchID and a.CompID=b.COmpID
Where a.ItemNatureCode = 'F' and a.BranchID = #BranchID and a.CompID = #CompID
Group by a.ItemCode, a.ItemDesc
Having sum(b.CBQty)<=0
Here the problem is that im passing an "#ShowZeroStock" value as as bit if the "#ShowZeroStock" value is '1' then Having should not be validated or (i.e: All values from the table should be returned including zero)
So How to change the query based on passed bit value "#ShowZeroStock"
I can Use "If else " condition at the top and remove having in else part, but for a lengthy query i can't do the same.
Is this the logic you want?
Having sum(b.CBQty) <= 0 or #ShowZeroStock = 1
I have following query for calculated member:
SUM(
EXCEPT([Policy].[Policy Status].[Policy Status],[Policy].[Policy Status].&[Void])
, [Measures].[CountPolicyEndorsesNull]
)
What I want is to include another EXCLUDE filter. I have tried following:
SUM(
{EXCEPT([Policy].[Policy Status].[Policy Status],[Policy].[Policy Status].&[Void])}
*
{EXCEPT([Invoice].[Invoice Status].[Invoice Status],[Invoice].[Invoice Status].&[Void])}
, [Measures].[CountPolicyEndorsesNull]
)
but it returns more result than the first query. Any ideas?
Your syntax is correct. The reasons it could be more are the following:
You have negative results in ([Invoice].[Invoice Status].&[Void], [Measures].[CountPolicyEndorsesNull])
You have a default member set on [Invoice].[Invoice Status].[Invoice Status].
Try returning the following query:
select
[Measures].[CountPolicyEndorsesNull]
on columns,
{[Invoice].[Invoice Status].DefaultMember,
[Invoice].[Invoice Status].&[Void]
}
on rows
from [CubeName]
That will get you your culprit.
In MySQL, is there a way to set the "total" fields to zero if they are NULL?
Here is what I have:
SELECT uo.order_id, uo.order_total, uo.order_status,
(SELECT SUM(uop.price * uop.qty)
FROM uc_order_products uop
WHERE uo.order_id = uop.order_id
) AS products_subtotal,
(SELECT SUM(upr.amount)
FROM uc_payment_receipts upr
WHERE uo.order_id = upr.order_id
) AS payment_received,
(SELECT SUM(uoli.amount)
FROM uc_order_line_items uoli
WHERE uo.order_id = uoli.order_id
) AS line_item_subtotal
FROM uc_orders uo
WHERE uo.order_status NOT IN ("future", "canceled")
AND uo.uid = 4172;
The data comes out fine, except the NULL fields should be 0.
How can I return 0 for NULL in MySQL?
Use IFNULL:
IFNULL(expr1, 0)
From the documentation:
If expr1 is not NULL, IFNULL() returns expr1; otherwise it returns expr2. IFNULL() returns a numeric or string value, depending on the context in which it is used.
You can use coalesce(column_name,0) instead of just column_name. The coalesce function returns the first non-NULL value in the list.
I should mention that per-row functions like this are usually problematic for scalability. If you think your database may get to be a decent size, it's often better to use extra columns and triggers to move the cost from the select to the insert/update.
This amortises the cost assuming your database is read more often than written (and most of them are).
None of the above answers were complete for me.
If your field is named field, so the selector should be the following one:
IFNULL(`field`,0) AS field
For example in a SELECT query:
SELECT IFNULL(`field`,0) AS field, `otherfield` FROM `mytable`
Hope this can help someone to not waste time.
You can try something like this
IFNULL(NULLIF(X, '' ), 0)
Attribute X is assumed to be empty if it is an empty String, so after that you can declare as a zero instead of last value. In another case, it would remain its original value.
Anyway, just to give another way to do that.
Yes IFNULL function will be working to achieve your desired result.
SELECT uo.order_id, uo.order_total, uo.order_status,
(SELECT IFNULL(SUM(uop.price * uop.qty),0)
FROM uc_order_products uop
WHERE uo.order_id = uop.order_id
) AS products_subtotal,
(SELECT IFNULL(SUM(upr.amount),0)
FROM uc_payment_receipts upr
WHERE uo.order_id = upr.order_id
) AS payment_received,
(SELECT IFNULL(SUM(uoli.amount),0)
FROM uc_order_line_items uoli
WHERE uo.order_id = uoli.order_id
) AS line_item_subtotal
FROM uc_orders uo
WHERE uo.order_status NOT IN ("future", "canceled")
AND uo.uid = 4172;