I have column type of INT, I want to select 1 if it contains 1 and 0 otherwise. I know only way to do it using CASE:
CASE WHEN val=1 THEN 1 ELSE 0
What other approaches there is to achieve the same result?
SQL SERVER 2012:
SELECT CAST(IIF ( field = 1, 1, 0 ) AS BIT) FROM table
Otherwise:
SELECT CAST(CASE field WHEN 1 THEN 1 ELSE 0 END AS BIT) From table
All you have to do is cast/convert the int
to a bit
.
DECLARE
@val INT = 42;
,@bitVal BIT;
SET @bitVal = CAST(@val AS BIT); -- equals 1
Any non-zero number will be converted to true.
https://technet.microsoft.com/en-us/library/ms191530(v=sql.105).aspx#_bit
To convert is simple, as long as it is 1 or 0 you can just assign it, no need to cast anything
you do the same when you declare a variable right?
@declare @myBit bit =1;
however when you want to do something more useful with the integer like bitmap comparison things get more interesting. you can compare two integers and return a bit based on the way the defined.
Let me try and visualise
00000001=1
00000010=2
00000011=3
==============
FFFFFFTT
so if you have a 1 the value becomes True,
Actually it is a bitmap comparison with 2 values is like mapping a raster, you can have several or even group them using 0+1 at a byte level.
Above you can see that 1 "is in" 3 as well as that 2 "is in" 3
look at the TSQL unit test example below
declare @notSet int =0
, @CanView int =1
, @CanEdit int =2
, @CanSubmit int =4
, @CanApprove int =8
, @CanDelete int =16;
declare @contributor int = @CanView | @CanEdit | @CanSubmit --> Can't delete
, @moderator int = @CanView | @CanEdit | @CanDelete --> not allowed to sumbit
, @admin int = @CanView | @CanEdit | @CanSubmit | @CanApprove | @CanDelete;--> can do all
SELECT TEST='A admin can Submit' , RESULT= iif(@admin & @CanSubmit = @CanSubmit,'TRUE','FALSE')
UNION ALL
SELECT TEST='A Moderator may not Submit' , RESULT= iif(@moderator & @CanSubmit = @CanSubmit,'FALSE','TRUE')
UNION ALL
SELECT TEST='A Contributer may not delete' , RESULT= iif(@contributor & @CanDelete = @CanDelete,'FALSE','TRUE')
UNION ALL
SELECT TEST='A Moderator may delete' , RESULT= iif(@moderator & @CanDelete = @CanDelete,'TRUE','FALSE')
You can combine the values together using the bit operator | like this 1|2 = 3, and 1|1 =1, do not mix up "|" with a "+" here as it will not always work well ;-)
An example, the bug would be @CanView + @CanView would be @CanEdit,
when you expect @CanView | @canView will still be @canView
Try it in SQL
SELECT (1|1), (1+1)
Below some C#, Hope it helps those that like to save and work with enums in code and database.
Say you have an Enum and a class like this: [Flags] public enum Rights { notSet =0 , CanView =1 , CanEdit =2 , CanSubmit =4 , CanApprove =8 , CanDelete =16 }
public class User
{
public Rights Permission {get;set}
}
...
// user can change his own posts
var user = new User();
user.Permission = Rights.CanView | Rights.CanEdit | Rights.CanDelete ;
You can now store the permission in the database and read the value using one of the below methods where you compare one or compare several
var result = user.Permission & Rights.CanView == Rights.CanView;
var canChange = ((user.Permission & (Rights.CanView | Rights.CanEdit | Rights.CanDelete)) != 0);
So, Round Tripped to the database and back, hope you have what you are looking for
Happy coding,
Walter
Here is one more solution. Without case
or iif
:
select ~cast(sign(abs(@i - 1)) as bit)
But it doesn't work if @i = -2147483648. You should then convert it to bigint
.
DECLARE @r VARCHAR(10)='1' SELECT CAST(@r AS BIT)