34

I have a select statement

SELECT     QBalance
FROM         dbo.CustomerBalance
WHERE     (CustomerID = 1) AND (MarchentID = @MerchantId)

I want to check if that statement returns 0 rows. I tried to use the ISNULL and IFNULL but it seems that I'm missing something.

3
  • 1
    By Null do you mean no rows, or an actual Null value in QBalance? And what would you like to do if you get null?
    – Jamie F
    Oct 28, 2011 at 16:26
  • To help you in the future, no rows is different than null. (You should edit this question to change to No Rows, and specify what you'd like to happen.)
    – Jamie F
    Oct 28, 2011 at 16:34
  • 1
    ok thanks, thats what I've done and it works fine DECLARE @NULL int SET @NULL= (SELECT COUNT (QBalance) FROM dbo.CustomerBalance WHERE (CustomerID = @CustomerID) AND (MarchentID = @MerchantId)) IF @NULL=0 BEGIN Insert into [CustomerBalance]([CustomerID],[MarchentID],[QBalance],[InitialDate]) VALUES(@CustomerID,@MerchantId,@CodeQPoints,GETDATE()) END ELSE UPDATE [CustomerBalance] SET QBalance=@CodeQPoints+QBalance,InitialDate=GETDATE() WHERE dbo.CustomerBalance.CustomerID=@CustomerID and dbo.CustomerBalance.MarchentID=@MerchantId
    – Islam
    Oct 28, 2011 at 16:52

6 Answers 6

68

To find out whether no matching rows exist you can use NOT EXISTS. Which can be more efficient than counting all matching rows

IF NOT EXISTS(SELECT * FROM ...)
BEGIN
PRINT 'No matching row exists'
END
14

If this is SQL Server, try @@ROWCOUNT.

9
SELECT    COUNT(*) 
FROM         dbo.CustomerBalance 
WHERE     (CustomerID = 1) AND (MarchentID = @MerchantId) 

If you get 0, you got 0. :)

2
  • any efficient way to do so Jul 8, 2021 at 14:56
  • see the accepted answer, or look at your indexing strategy. Jul 9, 2021 at 18:46
6

You can use @@ROWCOUNT. For e.g.

SELECT     QBalance
FROM         dbo.CustomerBalance
WHERE     (CustomerID = 1) AND (MarchentID = @MerchantId)

--This will return no of rows returned by above statement.
SELECT @@ROWCOUNT

You will get 0 if first statement will not return any rows. You can also use if statement to check that just after first statement. e.g.

IF @@ROWCOUNT <> 0 
  PRINT 'Select statement is returning some rows'
ELSE 
  PRINT 'No rows returned' 
3

try this:

SELECT     ISNULL(QBalance, 'ReplaceValue')
FROM         dbo.CustomerBalance
WHERE     (CustomerID = 1) AND (MarchentID = @MerchantId)
2
  • Very simple, very nice May 29, 2014 at 19:00
  • 7
    @Jordan_Walters - It doesn't work though. If no rows exist there is no value to apply ISNULL on. Sep 8, 2014 at 13:20
0

Could also use an outer ISNULL check?

SELECT ISNULL((
SELECT QBalance
FROM   dbo.CustomerBalance
WHERE  (CustomerID = 1) AND (MarchentID = @MerchantId)), 0)

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