88

Let us suppose the following table (e.g. a result of several inner join statements):

id | column_1 | column_2
------------------------
 1 |  1       | 
 2 |  2       | 2
 3 |          | 3

Which you could for example get from the following statement:

select a.id, t1.column_1, t2.column_2
from a
left join t1 on a.id = t1.id
left join t2 on a.id = t2.id

Now, if i'd like to sum up t1.column_1 and t2.column_2 as follows

select 
    a.id, 
    t1.column_1, 
    t2.column_2,
    (t1.column_1 + t2.column_2) as cumulated
from a
left join t1 on a.id = t1.id
left join t2 on a.id = t2.id

The result will look as follows:

id | column_1 | column_2 | cumulated
------------------------------------
 1 |  1       | NULL     | NULL
 2 |  2       | 2        | 4
 3 |  NULL    | 3        | NULL
 

My question basically is: is there a way to typecast NULL into 0 in order to do some math?

I have tried CONVERT(t1.column_1, SIGNED) and CAST(t1.column_1 as SIGNED), but a NULL stays a NULL.

1 Answer 1

164

Use IFNULL(column, 0) to convert the column value to zero.

Alternatively, the COALESCE function will do the same thing: COALESCE(column, 0), except

  1. COALESCE is ANSI-compliant, IFNULL is not
  2. COALESCE takes an arbitrary number of columns/values and will return the first non-null value passed to it.
4
  • and coalesce can have more than one value ?
    – ante.sabo
    Sep 17, 2009 at 21:07
  • 10
    Yes...so COALESCE(column1, column2, 0) will return the first non-null of these values. Bear in mind this works horizontally, not vertically. The columns must belong to the same table row. Sep 17, 2009 at 21:15
  • @rexem: Thanks, that's very nice of you to say. Much appreciated! Sep 19, 2009 at 17:48
  • @David Andres A million thank-yous. If only I could upvote a second time.
    – story
    Mar 23, 2012 at 8:09

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