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I am trying to do something that should be fairly simple but ISNULL isn't doing what I thought it would.

Basically I have a stored procedure and I am expecting either PARAM1 OR PARAM2 to have a matching value in my table.

SELECT * FROM MyTable WITH (NOLOCK)
        WHERE      
        field1 = ISNULL(@PARAM1 ,field1 )
        AND        
        field2 = @PARAM2

This works fine until I have NULL fields in my row then it excludes those results. Is there a different method that can cater for this?

3 Answers 3

2

ISNULL replaces the first value with the second value, so only if your parameter @PARAM1 is NULL does it replace it with PARAM1. I assume you're not passing in NULL values, so that's probably not what you want. More likely you just want to say

WHERE
(Field1 = @PARAM1 OR Field1 IS NULL)
AND
Field2 = @Param2

I Suppose you could use ISNULL in this fashion too:

ISNULL(Field1, @PARAM1) = @PARAM1
5
  • No. The OP passes in either @PARAM1 or @PARAM2 and they are wanting the parameter that is NULL to effectively be a No-OP. Except it isn't as the act of doing PARAM1 = will exclude any rows where that column is NULL. May 12, 2011 at 15:07
  • Param 1 or 2 can be null. I only pass in the param that I'm interested in and the other is set to NULL
    – Andrew
    May 12, 2011 at 15:08
  • Martin, that's what I was saying. If the column value is NULL (as he says, "until I have NULL fields in my row"), the @PARAM1 (which won't be NULL) won't match it. So he either needs to use ISNULL on the column value, or check to see if Param1 IS NULL.
    – Ryan
    May 12, 2011 at 15:15
  • Andi, if @PARAM1 or @PARAM2 can match, can't you just use OR instead of AND in your WHERE clause?
    – Ryan
    May 12, 2011 at 15:24
  • I can't because when param1 is null param2 takes a set value of for example 1234567. I know my question doesn't show this clearly. What works is the following: (Field1= @Param1 OR Field1 IS NULL) AND (Field2= @Param2) can you update answer and I'll mark as answer :)
    – Andrew
    May 12, 2011 at 15:28
1

null is special in sql. If you do any comparisons on a column any rows that have a null for that column will be excluded.

SELECT * FROM MyTable WITH (NOLOCK)
        WHERE      
        (PARAM1 = @PARAM1 or PARAM1 is null)
        AND        
        (PARAM2 = @PARAM2 or PARAM2 is null)
1

Use

field1 = ISNULL(@PARAM1, A_REPLACEMENT_VALUE_IF_PARAM1_IS_NULL)

This will evaluate to-

field1 = @PARAM1 if @PARAM1 IS NOT NULL.

field1 = A_REPLACEMENT_VALUE_IF_PARAM1_IS_NULL if @PARAM1 IS NULL

EDIT:

Try these:

--If you want to ignore the WHERE clause if PARAM1/2 is null
ISNULL(field1, DEFAULT_VALUE) = ISNULL(@PARAM1, ISNULL(field1, DEFAULT_VALUE))
OR
ISNULL(field2, DEFAULT_VALUE) = ISNULL(@PARAM2, ISNULL(field2, DEFAULT_VALUE))

OR

--To get all rows with field1/2 as PARAM1/2 and ignore everything else
field1 = @PARAM1 OR field2 = @PARAM2
5
  • That's what I'm doing though isn't it?
    – Andrew
    May 12, 2011 at 15:10
  • @Andi Try ISNULL(PARAM1, DEFAULT_VALUE) = ISNULL(@PARAM1 ,DEFAULT_VALUE) May 12, 2011 at 15:13
  • 1
    @Andi Why can't you just try PARAM1 = @PARAM1 OR PARAM2 = @PARAM2 ? May 12, 2011 at 15:18
  • I've answered why to a dupe comment above :)
    – Andrew
    May 13, 2011 at 7:27
  • I still don't understand. What happens when field1 has a value and feild2 is NULL. May be an example would have helped. Anyway, glad that you found an answer. May 13, 2011 at 15:03

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