416

What is the best practice for creating a yes/no i.e. Boolean field when converting from an access database or in general?

13 Answers 13

560

The equivalent is a BIT field.

In SQL you use 0 and 1 to set a bit field (just as a yes/no field in Access). In Management Studio it displays as a false/true value (at least in recent versions).

When accessing the database through ASP.NET it will expose the field as a boolean value.

6
  • 4
    And if you link the table in an Access database, true will have the value -1 and false will have the value 0. At least in Access 2003. (This is the version I had handy that was connected to a customer's MSSQL database). Sep 20, 2013 at 10:02
  • 3
    Please note that it is not exactly equivalent. If a scalar function returns a bit, you still need to test if it is 0 or 1. For example, dbo.IsReturnsBit(value) = 1 Sep 19, 2014 at 18:26
  • @D-Money: Yes, but you only need to do the comparison if you want to use the value in a condition. If you use the value in the result, then you should not do a comparison.
    – Guffa
    Jun 7, 2015 at 10:31
  • 1
    Re Mgt Studio, if you are copy+pasting data in you need to have it as True / False also, not as 1 or 0.
    – gorlaz
    Oct 27, 2015 at 21:44
  • 1
    @Zhang it will be smaller only if you have multiple bit fields in that table - then you can fit multiple ones into one byte. If it's just one BIT field per table, then it's the same as tinyint.
    – userfuser
    Jul 28, 2023 at 9:30
135

The BIT datatype is generally used to store boolean values (0 for false, 1 for true).

1
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    Are you at all concerned that the semantics of bits and booleans are different? Mar 14, 2017 at 20:15
28

You can use the bit column type.

0
24

You can use the BIT field.

For adding a BIT column to an existing table, the SQL command would look like:

ALTER TABLE table_name ADD yes_no BIT

If you want to create a new table, you could do: CREATE TABLE table_name (yes_no BIT).

23

There are already answers saying use of Bit. I will add more to these answers.

You should use bit for representing Boolean values.

Remarks from MSDN article.

Bit can take a value of 1, 0, or NULL.

The SQL Server Database Engine optimizes storage of bit columns. If there are 8 or less bit columns in a table, the columns are stored as 1 byte. If there are from 9 up to 16 bit columns, the columns are stored as 2 bytes, and so on.

The string values TRUE and FALSE can be converted to bit values: TRUE is converted to 1 and FALSE is converted to 0.

Converting to bit promotes any nonzero value to 1.

Reference

Note: It is good practice to keep values as 1 and 0 only with data type NOT NULL

As Bit have values 1, 0 and NULL. See truth table for this. So plan values accordingly. It might add confusion by allowing NULL value for bit data type.

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Reference

1
  • Bit can take a value of 1, 0, or NULL. If the bit data type allows nulls, I don't have to specify NULL within the field definition? That definition makes me think [field1] [bit] NULL vs [field1] [bit] are equivalent?
    – spencer741
    Feb 7, 2021 at 23:42
21

You can use the data type bit

Values inserted which are greater than 0 will be stored as '1'

Values inserted which are less than 0 will be stored as '1'

Values inserted as '0' will be stored as '0'

This holds true for MS SQL Server 2012 Express

1
  • 3
    @BiLaL This is common behaviour across most languages. 0 is false, any non-0 number is true. It was also common for -1 to be the default value for true because in signed binary it has every bit set to 1. Nowadays it's very common to see 1 as the default value for true (only the least significant bit set).
    – CJ Dennis
    Jun 27, 2016 at 3:33
18

Sample usage while creating a table:

[ColumnName]     BIT   NULL   DEFAULT 0
1
  • 1
    Going off the info in @Somnath Muluk's answer, wouldn't allowing for null values in this column create potential confusion, as values could be 1, 0, or null?
    – jslatane
    Nov 17, 2022 at 19:43
15

You can use the BIT field

To create new table:

CREATE TABLE Tb_Table1
(
ID              INT,
BitColumn       BIT DEFAULT 1
)

Adding Column in existing Table:

ALTER TABLE Tb_Table1 ADD BitColumn  BIT DEFAULT 1

To Insert record:

INSERT Tb_Table1 VALUES(11,0)
10

bit will be the simplest and also takes up the least space. Not very verbose compared to "Y/N" but I am fine with it.

1
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    It's better I think - no need to worry about Y == y and N = n, pure true or false. Intention is totally obvious, and there are no "special" cases that single character fields invite :)
    – Rob Grant
    Jan 15, 2014 at 10:46
6

bit is the most suitable option. Otherwise I once used int for that purpose. 1 for true & 0 for false.

2
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    Normally its used 0 for False and non-zero for True.
    – Edu
    Jul 15, 2016 at 16:23
  • 3
    there are a lot of flavors or true might say a good politician :D Dec 2, 2016 at 8:53
2

In SQL Server Management Studio of Any Version, Use BIT as Data Type

which will provide you with True or False Value options. in case you want to use Only 1 or 0 then you can use this method:

CREATE TABLE SampleBit(
    bar int NOT NULL CONSTRAINT CK_foo_bar CHECK (bar IN (-1, 0, 1))
)

But I will strictly advise BIT as The BEST Option. Hope fully it's help someone.

1

You can use BIT type which can have 1 or 0, or also NULL if NULL is allowed.

BIT type converts:

  • Any integer values except 0 to 1.
  • Any integer string values except "0" to 1.
  • "0" to 0.

Then, you can create a table with BIT type as shown below:

CREATE TABLE doctor (
  id INT IDENTITY,
  name NVARCHAR(50),
  on_call BIT, -- Here
  PRIMARY KEY(id)
)
GO

Then, insert rows as shown below:

INSERT INTO doctor 
VALUES ("John", 1), ("Tom", 0), ("Lisa", "-23"), ("Kai", "0"), ("Bob", NULL)
GO
1> SELECT * FROM doctor
2> GO
id name on_call
-- ---- -------
 1 John       1 <- 1
 2 Tom        0 <- 0
 3 Lisa       1 <- "-23"
 4 Kai        0 <- "0"
 5 Bob     NULL <- NULL
-1

Below the List of database where what type of datatype is use for Boolean

-> Oracle -> Number(1)

-> SQL Server -> BIT

-> MySql -> BIT or TINYINT

->postgreSQL -> boolean

I hope this is really helpful thanks.

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