Is there an easy way to figure out if a varchar is a number?
Examples:
abc123 --> no number
123 --> yes, its a number
ISNUMERIC will not do - it tells you that the string can be converted to any of the numeric types, which is almost always a pointless piece of information to know. For example, all of the following are numeric, according to ISNUMERIC:
£, $, 0d0
If you want to check for digits and only digits, a negative LIKE expression is what you want:
not Value like '%[^0-9]%'
Value like '%[0-9]%'
would be "the string contains at least one digit character". Value like '%[^0-9]%'
would be "the string contains at least one non-digit character". But, again, my test is not Value like '%[^0-9]%'
which negates the previous test and is "the string contains no non-digit characters"
Nov 8, 2016 at 13:36
ISNUMERIC will do
Check the NOTES section too in the article.
You can check like this:
declare @vchar varchar(50)
set @vchar ='34343';
select case when @vchar not like '%[^0-9]%' then 'Number' else 'Not a Number' end
Using SQL Server 2012+, you can use the TRY_* functions if you have specific needs. For example,
-- will fail for decimal values, but allow negative values
TRY_CAST(@value AS INT) IS NOT NULL
-- will fail for non-positive integers; can be used with other examples below as well, or reversed if only negative desired
TRY_CAST(@value AS INT) > 0
-- will fail if a $ is used, but allow decimals to the specified precision
TRY_CAST(@value AS DECIMAL(10,2)) IS NOT NULL
-- will allow valid currency
TRY_CAST(@value AS MONEY) IS NOT NULL
-- will allow scientific notation to be used like 1.7E+3
TRY_CAST(@value AS FLOAT) IS NOT NULL
I ran into the need to allow decimal values, so I used not Value like '%[^0-9.]%'
.
, 2.2.2...1....0
, 2.1.2
and so on. You would need a second condition to also exclude ones with more than one decimal point, and those where the decimal is not between two numbers.
Wade73's answer for decimals doesn't quite work. I've modified it to allow only a single decimal point.
declare @MyTable table(MyVar nvarchar(10));
insert into @MyTable (MyVar)
values
(N'1234')
, (N'000005')
, (N'1,000')
, (N'293.8457')
, (N'x')
, (N'+')
, (N'293.8457.')
, (N'......');
-- This shows that Wade73's answer allows some non-numeric values to slip through.
select * from (
select
MyVar
, case when MyVar not like N'%[^0-9.]%' then 1 else 0 end as IsNumber
from
@MyTable
) t order by IsNumber;
-- Notice the addition of "and MyVar not like N'%.%.%'".
select * from (
select
MyVar
, case when MyVar not like N'%[^0-9.]%' and MyVar not like N'%.%.%' then 1 else 0 end as IsNumber
from
@MyTable
) t
order by IsNumber;
Damien_The_Unbeliever noted that his was only good for digits
Wade73 added a bit to handle decimal points
neizan made an additional tweak as did notwhereuareat.
Unfortunately, none appear to handle negative values and they appear to have issues with a comma in the value...
Here's my tweak to pick up negative values and those with commas
declare @MyTable table(MyVar nvarchar(10));
insert into @MyTable (MyVar)
values
(N'1234')
, (N'000005')
, (N'1,000')
, (N'293.8457')
, (N'x')
, (N'+')
, (N'293.8457.')
, (N'......')
, (N'.')
, (N'-375.4')
, (N'-00003')
, (N'-2,000')
, (N'3-3')
, (N'3000-')
;
-- This shows that Neizan's answer allows "." to slip through.
select * from (
select
MyVar
, case when MyVar not like N'%[^0-9.]%' then 1 else 0 end as IsNumber
from
@MyTable
) t order by IsNumber;
-- Notice the addition of "and MyVar not like '.'".
select * from (
select
MyVar
, case when MyVar not like N'%[^0-9.]%' and MyVar not like N'%.%.%' and MyVar not like '.' then 1 else 0 end as IsNumber
from
@MyTable
) t
order by IsNumber;
--Trying to tweak for negative values and the comma
--Modified when comparison
select * from (
select
MyVar
, case
when MyVar not like N'%[^0-9.,-]%' and MyVar not like '.' and isnumeric(MyVar) = 1 then 1
else 0
end as IsNumber
from
@MyTable
) t
order by IsNumber;
DECLARE @A nvarchar(100) = '12'
IF(ISNUMERIC(@A) = 1)
BEGIN
PRINT 'YES NUMERIC'
END
Neizan's code lets values of just a "." through. At the risk of getting too pedantic, I added one more AND
clause.
declare @MyTable table(MyVar nvarchar(10));
insert into @MyTable (MyVar)
values
(N'1234')
, (N'000005')
, (N'1,000')
, (N'293.8457')
, (N'x')
, (N'+')
, (N'293.8457.')
, (N'......')
, (N'.')
;
-- This shows that Neizan's answer allows "." to slip through.
select * from (
select
MyVar
, case when MyVar not like N'%[^0-9.]%' then 1 else 0 end as IsNumber
from
@MyTable
) t order by IsNumber;
-- Notice the addition of "and MyVar not like '.'".
select * from (
select
MyVar
, case when MyVar not like N'%[^0-9.]%' and MyVar not like N'%.%.%' and MyVar not like '.' then 1 else 0 end as IsNumber
from
@MyTable
) t
order by IsNumber;
Do not forget to exclude carriage returns from your data!
As in:
SELECT
Myotherval
, CASE WHEN TRIM(REPLACE([MyVal], char(13) + char(10), '')) not like '%[^0-9]%' and RTRIM(REPLACE([MyVal], char(13) + char(10), '')) not like '.' and isnumeric(REPLACE([MyVal], char(13) + char(10), '')) = 1 THEN 'my number: ' + [MyVal]
ELSE ISNULL(Cast([MyVal] AS VARCHAR(8000)), '')
END AS 'MyVal'
FROM MyTable
In case you want to add a constraint on a field:
Positive integer with fixed length
ALTER TABLE dbo.BankBranchType
ADD CONSTRAINT CK_TransitNumberMustBe5Digits
CHECK (TransitNumber NOT like '%[^0-9]%'
AND LEN(TransitNumber) = 5)
To check the Number, Currency, and Amount, use the below SQL fragment.
@value NOT LIKE '%[^0-9.,]%'
For a quick win, refer to the below example:
Function example:
CREATE FUNCTION [dbo].[fnCheckValueIsNumber](
@value NVARCHAR(255)=NULL
)RETURNS INT AS BEGIN
DECLARE @ReturnValue INT=0
IF EXISTS (SELECT * WHERE @value NOT LIKE '%[^0-9.,]%') SELECT @ReturnValue=1
RETURN @ReturnValue;
Execution result
SELECT [dbo].[fnCheckValueIsNumber]('12345')
RESULT = 1
SELECT [dbo].[fnCheckValueIsNumber]('10020.25')
RESULT = 1
SELECT [dbo].[fnCheckValueIsNumber]('10,020.25')
RESULT = 1
SELECT [dbo].[fnCheckValueIsNumber]('12,345ABCD')
RESULT = 0
isnumeric
but it has a lot of quirks1e23
?