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1

Hey all,

MySQL/MSSQL has a neat little inline if function you can use within queries to detect null values, as shown below.

SELECT

...

foo.a_field AS "a_field",
SELECT if(foo.bar is null, 0, foo.bar) AS "bar",
foo.a_field AS "a_field",

...

The problem I'm running into now is that this code is not safe to run on an Oracle database, as it seems not to support this inline if syntax.

Is there an equivalent in Oracle?

Thanks!

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6 Answers

vote up 9 vote down check

Use the standard COALESCE function:

SELECT COALESCE(foo.bar, 0) as "bar", ...

Or use Oracle's own NVL function that does the same.

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This seems more like what I was looking for. Thanks! – ModeEngage Sep 15 at 17:07
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To supplement the rest of the answers here, which deal primarily with NULL values and COALESCE/NVL/NVL2:

SELECT *
FROM TheTable
WHERE field1 = CASE field2 WHEN 0 THEN 'abc' WHEN 1 THEN 'def' ELSE '' END

CASE statements are not as succinct, obviously, but they are geared towards flexibility. This is particularly useful when your conditions are not based on NULL-ness.

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vote up 3 vote down

You want to use NVL, or NVL2

NVL(t.column, 0)
NVL2( string1, value_if_NOT_null, value_if_null )
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Awesome. Many thanks. – ModeEngage Sep 15 at 17:05
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Yup, NVL should do the trick.

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vote up 0 vote down

You want the nvl function: nvl(foo.bar, 0)

Oracle does support various ifs and cases as well.

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vote up 0 vote down

Just do nvl(foo.bar,0), you don't have to do

(select nvl(foo.bar,0)...
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