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I am facing a tricky problem in that my table has two different columns which decide whether a record is active or not active. (Two different columns because of changes in the same DB again and again not by me of-course.)

The fields are of bit type in the database. Can anybody suggest a query which will get the records from table.

ex. select * from product (isActive = 0 or isCancelled =1)

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  • 1
    it depends on how you want to solve the conflicts between the isActive and isCancelled. If they are always opposite then you can check only one of them, otherwise you have to mention in each case what should be considered.
    – wxyz
    Nov 9, 2012 at 13:00
  • I don't believe that the column are of Boolean type, since SQL Server doesn't have one of those. Perhaps you meant bit... Nov 9, 2012 at 13:14
  • @Damien_The_Unbeliever yes you are right,its bit not Boolean.Sorry its my mistake.
    – gofor.net
    Nov 9, 2012 at 13:19
  • You might also take this opportunity to clean up and phase out one of the columns. That said, having these two values may be necessary from a legitimate process need. It's entirely possible that something could be active and cancelled at once (was active, recently set to cancelled, but the cancellation has yet to take place, which would then set active to false).
    – coge.soft
    Nov 9, 2012 at 16:09

3 Answers 3

1

inactive:

select * from product where isActive = 0 or isCancelled =1

active

select * from product where isActive = 1 and isCancelled =0
1

I think here's nice way to write this queries

select * from product where isActive = 1 and isCancelled = 0 -- Active records
select * from product where not (isActive = 1 and isCancelled = 0) -- Inactive records
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  • is putting "and" between "isActive = 1" and "isCancelled = 0" correct?
    – coge.soft
    Nov 9, 2012 at 16:06
  • yes, I think that the beauty this code. You take expression to filter active records and then revert it just by putting not before Nov 9, 2012 at 18:49
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I would select the calculated value:

select *, (isActive = 1 and isCancelled = 0) as active
from product

or better yet create a view to hide this ugliness:

create view complete_product as
select *, (isActive = 1 and isCancelled = 0) as active
from product
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  • is putting "and" between "isActive = 1" and "isCancelled = 0" correct?
    – coge.soft
    Nov 9, 2012 at 16:05
  • @coge.soft yes, it's correct syntax. each = comparison returns a boolean, which is then ANDed to return a final boolean
    – Bohemian
    Nov 9, 2012 at 23:40

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