1

I have a stored procedure that is required to update an existing record with new data, however it must not 'over write' any existing data.

For Example we may have three fields:

 FirstName | LastName | PhoneNumber

Call the above 'TableX'.

In a very simple update this could look something like this:

 Update TableX
 set    FirstName = [TableY.FirstName]
       ,LastName = [TableY.LastName]
       ,PhoneNumber = [TableY.PhoneNumer]
 etc.....

However I require that each column Only Updates (from TableY) if it is empty.

4 Answers 4

4
Update TableX
set    FirstName = ISNULL(FirstName, [TableY.FirstName])
      ,LastName = ISNULL(LastNastName, [TableY.LastName])
      ,PhoneNumber = ISNULL(PhoneNumber, [TableY.PhoneNumer])

...

If 'empty' does not mean NULL then

Update TableX
set    FirstName = case FirstName when "" then [TableY.FirstName] else FirstName end
      ,LastName = case LastName when "" then [TableY.LastName]) else LastName end
      ,PhoneNumber = case PhoneNumber when "" then [TableY.PhoneNumer] else PhoneNumber end
1

you need to use when then to do this .

UPDATE [AdventureWorks_DB].[dbo].[activities]
SET  [FirstName ] = case  when FirstName  is  null then 'pass First Name'
                     else  [FirstName ]
end,
LastName  = case  when LastName  is  null then 'pass Last Name'
          else  LastName 
end,
PhoneNumber = case  when PhoneNumber is  null then 'pass PhoneNumber'
        else  PhoneNumber
end
0
0
update
    TableX
set 
FirstName = (case when FirstName = null then  @firstname else FirstName end)
where 
Id=1
0

Because an update is logically a delete then an insert there's no harm in using the COALESCE pattern, though it is probably a good idea not check for all NULL parameter values e.g.

UPDATE TableX
   SET FirstName = COALESCE(@FirstName, FirstName), 
       LastName = COALESCE(@LastName, LastName), 
       PhoneNumber = COALESCE(@PhoneNumber, PhoneNumer)
 WHERE COALESCE(@FirstName, @LastName, @PhoneNumber) IS NOT NULL
       AND person_X_ID = @person_X_ID;

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.