SELECT
sum(TotalHoursM)
+ (TotalHoursT)
+ (TotalHoursW)
+ (TotalHoursTH)
+ (TotalHoursF)
AS TOTAL
FROM LeaveRequest
9 Answers
If the column has a 0 value, you are fine, my guess is that you have a problem with a Null value, in that case you would need to use IsNull(Column, 0)
to ensure it is always 0 at minimum.
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2Yonita is Michael's answer answered your question mark it as answered by using the check mark.– ahsteeleJul 6, 2009 at 19:13
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69"Yonita is Michael's answer answered your question mark it as answered by using the check mark" -- my brain took an age to parse this sentence. May 9, 2013 at 11:47
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1In MySQL, ISNULL seems to be just a 1-parameter boolean function, but as in omkarv's answer, IFNULL does the job. Nov 6, 2015 at 12:28
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6
IsNull
is not portable, and the question doesn't specify a database. See below forCOALESCE
, which is portable (if not always optimal in performance).– jpmc26Dec 13, 2016 at 22:19 -
3The question is on SQL, but the IsNull function indicated is not an SQL primitive. Mar 8, 2017 at 16:29
The previous answers using the ISNULL
function are correct only for MS Sql Server. The COALESCE
function will also work in SQL Server. But will also work in standard SQL database systems. In the given example:
SELECT sum(COALESCE(TotalHoursM,0))
+ COALESCE(TotalHoursT,0)
+ COALESCE(TotalHoursW,0)
+ COALESCE(TotalHoursTH,0)
+ COALESCE(TotalHoursF,0) AS TOTAL FROM LeaveRequest
This is identical to the ISNULL
solution with the only difference being the name of the function. Both work in SQL Server but, COALESCE
is ANSI standard and ISNULL
is not. Also, COALESCE
is more flexible.
ISNULL
will only work with two parameters. If the first parameter is NULL then the value of the second parameter is returned, else the value of the first is returned.
COALESCE will take 2 to 'n' (I don't know the limit of 'n') parameters and return the value of the first parameter that is not NULL
. When there are only two parameters the effect is the same as ISNULL
.
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3Additionally, Oracle SQL does not have ISNULL. Though, in my experience, you may get better results with NVL(): docs.oracle.com/cd/B19306_01/server.102/b14200/functions105.htm– DarrenJan 7, 2015 at 22:56
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3Just the one i was looking for - postgres doesn't have isnull ether. Nov 5, 2015 at 9:42
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3Isnull didn't work as expected in MySQL. Coalesce did the job. Thanks. Jul 16, 2016 at 22:45
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1IsNull is not a SQL primitive. Therefore the other answers are not correct, only this one. Mar 8, 2017 at 16:31
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SELECT sum(isnull(TotalHoursM,0))
+ isnull(TotalHoursT,0)
+ isnull(TotalHoursW,0)
+ isnull(TotalHoursTH,0)
+ isnull(TotalHoursF,0))
AS TOTAL FROM LeaveRequest
Just for reference, the equivalent statement for MySQL is: IFNull(Column,0).
This statement evaluates as the column value if not null, otherwise it is evaluated as 0.
looks like you want to SUM all the columns (I'm not sure where "sum 3 columns" comes from), not just TotalHoursM, so try this:
SELECT
SUM( ISNULL(TotalHoursM ,0)
+ ISNULL(TotalHoursT ,0)
+ ISNULL(TotalHoursW ,0)
+ ISNULL(TotalHoursTH ,0)
+ ISNULL(TotalHoursF ,0)
) AS TOTAL
FROM LeaveRequest
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thanks for the down vote almost 8 years after answering this! ha ha, this is the exact same answer given by others on this very question. I answered before them, yet they have lots of up votes.– KM.Mar 9, 2017 at 17:33
You can also use nvl(Column,0)
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3
I would try this:
select sum (case when TotalHousM is null then 0 else TotalHousM end)
+ (case when TotalHousT is null then 0 else TotalHousT end)
+ (case when TotalHousW is null then 0 else TotalHousW end)
+ (case when TotalHousTH is null then 0 else TotalHousTH end)
+ (case when TotalHousF is null then 0 else TotalHousF end)
as Total
From LeaveRequest
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However I like this solution because it would also be able to take care of those cases where the value is blank and not NULL. You would have to add the LEN() > 0.– webwormNov 13, 2017 at 20:53
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If you want to avoid the null value use IsNull(Column, 1)
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3
IsNull(Column, 1)
will give wrong results. It will increase the sum / total by 1 for every null value.– ShivaApr 14, 2018 at 0:06
SQL Server
not tagged ?