I have a WHERE
clause that logically I want it to bring back results where the first digit of the short names don't match.
The short names can be:
1.1
1.2
2.1
2.2
Sample data WITHOUT where
clause:
+-----------+--------+------+
| Shortname | number | ID |
+-----------+--------+------+
| 2.1 | 1 | 3333 |
| 1.1 | 60 | 3333 |
| 1.2 | 90 | 3333 |
| 2.1 | 50 | 4444 |
| 2.2 | 30 | 4444 |
| 1.1 | 80 | 5555 |
| 1.2 | 10 | 5555 |
+-----------+--------+------+
Expected data WITH where
clause:
+-----------+--------+------+
| Shortname | number | ID |
+-----------+--------+------+
| 2.1 | 1 | 3333 |
| 1.1 | 60 | 3333 |
| 1.2 | 90 | 3333 |
+-----------+--------+------+
I tried the code:
SELECT shortname, number, id
FROM table
WHERE ((left(shortname,1) like '%1%') != ((left(shortname,1) like '%2%')
But it generates the error:
Msg 102, Level 15, State 1, Line 21
Incorrect syntax near '!'.
Clarification UPDATE
I need the results per ID, so in the sample above there are ID's 3333, 4444 and 5555. I want to only bring back the ID 3333
because it doesn't have only a single first character value in each shortname
. It contains both values 1
and 2
.
Where as I don't want to see the other ID's as there short names are matching on the first digit 1 = 1 and 2 = 2 etc.
left(shortname,1) like '%1%'
doesn't make sense.left(..,1)
will return a single character anyway, so there is no need for alike
with wildcards. This can be replaced with: left(shortname,1) = '1'. But I don't really understand what you are trying to retrieve. Why isn't
shortname = 2.2` not included in the expected output?