In Excel, there's a function called "MAX" that accepts numbers and returns the largest one in the set. Is there a function in T-SQL that duplicates this functionality? I haven't been able to find one, and I've written a UDF that does it for me, but I thought it was worth asking.

Here is the function I've been using:

CREATE FUNCTION dbo.LargerOf
(
    -- Add the parameters for the function here
    @First FLOAT,
    @Second FLOAT
)
RETURNS FLOAT
AS
BEGIN

    DECLARE @Result FLOAT

    IF @First > @Second
    	SET @result = @First
    ELSE
    	SET @Result = @Second

    RETURN @Result

END
GO

I don't expect any luck, but instead of moving my function to a whole bunch of new servers, I thought I'd at least ask. Thanks!

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You actually want a tsql equivalent of the MySQL/Oracle function GREATEST. Don't know any other than stored procedure :( – streetpc Jun 12 '09 at 22:54
That is, indeed, exactly what I want. Searching using that function name only re-affirms that I'm out of luck. Thanks! – rwmnau Jun 12 '09 at 23:03
2  
Duplicate: stackoverflow.com/questions/124417/… – JoeCool Feb 10 '11 at 19:29
possible duplicate of SQL MAX of multiple columns? – Factor Mystic Jul 14 '11 at 17:35
feedback

4 Answers

up vote 6 down vote accepted

I don't know if the function you need exists, but for a workaround, I like this one better

set @max = case when @first > @second then @first else @second end
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At first I was doing this, but then I got tired of typing it out (since I had to use it constantly) and decided to essentially wrap it in a UDF, which is the code I've given above. Thanks for the suggestion, though! – rwmnau Jun 12 '09 at 23:00
It will make a smaller UDF anyway :-) – tekBlues Jun 12 '09 at 23:02
2  
Be careful with using a UDF for this. Sometimes simply encapsulating code in a UDF will cause performance issues because SQL Server has to act on the resultset on a row-by-row basis, whereas built-in functions can usually be used on a set-based basis. – Tom H. Jun 13 '09 at 0:29
@TomH - Good point. This can be mitigated by using a table-valued function though. – Aaron Alton Jun 13 '09 at 1:57
@TomH - this is not a problem so long as the UDF is deterministic, as this one is. – Tor Haugen Aug 20 '09 at 21:00
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You could use:

CASE
   WHEN @First >= @Second THEN @FIRST
   ELSE @Second
END
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Unfortunately not.

A word of warning, for extremely intensive usage, I've found that scalar functions (even those which could be easily inlined with a CASE, like yours) really do not perform well on SQL Server 2005, so if you are dealing with millions of calls, put it inline (sometimes you can fake an inline TVF).

Hopefully, SQL Server will eventually have an inline SVF or have a function equivalent to GREATEST!

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declare @first int, @second int

select @first=45, @second=123

select max(a) from (select @first a UNION ALL select @second) x

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