SELECT
A.SETMOD, B.DESCRP
FROM
PMS.PSBSTTBL A
JOIN
PMS.PR029TBL B ON A.SETMOD = B.PAYMOD
Paymod
is of datatype VARCHAR
, SETMOD
of type decimal
SELECT
A.SETMOD, B.DESCRP
FROM
PMS.PSBSTTBL A
JOIN
PMS.PR029TBL B ON A.SETMOD = B.PAYMOD
Paymod
is of datatype VARCHAR
, SETMOD
of type decimal
A join
to two columns of different types is a really, really bad idea. Sometimes, though, other people design database systems, and we don't have a choice.
You have two choices, basically: convert both to numbers or both to strings. You are getting the error because in mixed type expressions, SQL Server converts to the more "restrictive" type (to simplify the logic). So, it converts the string to a number.
In SQL Server 2012+, I would suggest try_convert()
for the conversion to a number:
SELECT A.SETMOD, B.DESCRP
FROM PMS.PSBSTTBL A JOIN
PMS.PR029TBL B
ON A.SETMOD = TRY_CONVERT(DECIMAL(?, ?), B.PAYMOD);
The ?,?
should be the scale/precision of SETMOD
.
Of course, you could also force the conversion in the other direction:
SELECT A.SETMOD, B.DESCRP
FROM PMS.PSBSTTBL A JOIN
PMS.PR029TBL B
ON CAST(A.SETMOD AS VARCHAR(255)) = B.PAYMOD;
This conversion will succeed, so you don't need TRY_CONVERT()
.
Best thing is to convert the decimal to string and compare it with the string value.. make necessary adjustments on the decimal part.. :)
SELECT
A.SETMOD, B.DESCRP
FROM
PMS.PSBSTTBL A
JOIN
PMS.PR029TBL B ON CONVERT(VARCHAR(50),A.SETMOD) = B.PAYMOD
SELECT
A.SETMOD, B.DESCRP
FROM
PMS.PSBSTTBL A
JOIN
PMS.PR029TBL B ON A.SETMOD =convert(decimal, B.PAYMOD)