SELECT id, amount FROM report
I need amount
to be amount
if report.type='P'
and -amount
if report.type='N'
. How do I add this to the above query?
SELECT id,
IF(type = 'P', amount, amount * -1) as amount
FROM report
See https://dev.mysql.com/doc/refman/8.0/en/flow-control-functions.html.
Additionally, you could handle when the condition is null. In the case of a null amount:
SELECT id,
IF(type = 'P', IFNULL(amount,0), IFNULL(amount,0) * -1) as amount
FROM report
The part IFNULL(amount,0)
means when amount is not null return amount else return 0.
sql/item_cmpfunc.h 722: Item_func_ifnull(Item *a, Item *b) :Item_func_coalesce(a,b) {}
Commented
Sep 1, 2013 at 3:33
IF
statement, what's wrong?
Commented
Jan 31, 2017 at 20:57
Use a case
statement:
select id,
case report.type
when 'P' then amount
when 'N' then -amount
end as amount
from
`report`
if report.type = 'P' use amount, otherwise use -amount for anything else
. it won't consider the type if it's not 'P'.
Commented
Jan 20, 2015 at 13:41
SELECT CompanyName,
CASE WHEN Country IN ('USA', 'Canada') THEN 'North America'
WHEN Country = 'Brazil' THEN 'South America'
ELSE 'Europe' END AS Continent
FROM Suppliers
ORDER BY CompanyName;
select
id,
case
when report_type = 'P'
then amount
when report_type = 'N'
then -amount
else null
end
from table
Most simplest way is to use a IF(). Yes Mysql allows you to do conditional logic. IF function takes 3 params CONDITION, TRUE OUTCOME, FALSE OUTCOME.
So Logic is
if report.type = 'p'
amount = amount
else
amount = -1*amount
SQL
SELECT
id, IF(report.type = 'P', abs(amount), -1*abs(amount)) as amount
FROM report
You may skip abs() if all no's are +ve only
SELECT id, amount
FROM report
WHERE type='P'
UNION
SELECT id, (amount * -1) AS amount
FROM report
WHERE type = 'N'
ORDER BY id;
You can try this also
SELECT id , IF(type='p', IFNULL(amount,0), IFNULL(amount,0) * -1) as amount FROM table
This is not fantastic, but I did this IF()
nesting to normalize a few log messages that otherwise had unique values that made them not group:
SELECT
IF(process_error LIKE 'Already processed message id %', 'already processed',
IF(process_error LIKE 'Cannot calculate size of %', 'sequence error', process_error)
) AS process_err,
COUNT(id) AS process_count
FROM system_log
WHERE started >= '2023-06-01'
GROUP BY 1
ORDER BY process_count DESC
I wouldn't do this for more than a couple values, but for a throwaway query it's fine. It led to this output:
|process_err |process_count|
|---------------------------------------------|-------------|
|already processed |617 |
|Failed to process message: uncaught error |174 |
|sequence error |135 |
|Cannot read property 'FooBar' of undefined |118 |
|Missing field BarBaz |8 |
|Ignoring: no matches found |1 |
Whereas without it, rows 1 and 3 would be spread out over hundreds of rows.