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SQL Query Design Patterns and Best Practices

You're reading from  SQL Query Design Patterns and Best Practices

Product type Book
Published in Mar 2023
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781837633289
Pages 270 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Languages
Authors (6):
Steve Hughes Steve Hughes
Profile icon Steve Hughes
Dennis Neer Dennis Neer
Profile icon Dennis Neer
Dr. Ram Babu Singh Dr. Ram Babu Singh
Profile icon Dr. Ram Babu Singh
Shabbir H. Mala Shabbir H. Mala
Profile icon Shabbir H. Mala
Leslie Andrews Leslie Andrews
Profile icon Leslie Andrews
Chi Zhang Chi Zhang
Profile icon Chi Zhang
View More author details

Table of Contents (21) Chapters

Preface 1. Part 1: Refining Your Queries to Get the Results You Need
2. Chapter 1: Reducing Rows and Columns in Your Result Sets 3. Chapter 2: Efficiently Aggregating Data 4. Chapter 3: Formatting Your Results for Easier Consumption 5. Chapter 4: Manipulating Data Results Using Conditional SQL 6. Part 2: Solving Complex Business and Data Problems in Your Queries
7. Chapter 5: Using Common Table Expressions 8. Chapter 6: Analyze Your Data Using Window Functions 9. Chapter 7: Reshaping Data with Advanced Techniques 10. Chapter 8: Impact of SQL Server Security on Query Results 11. Part 3: Optimizing Your Queries to Improve Performance
12. Chapter 9: Understanding Query Plans 13. Chapter 10: Understanding the Impact of Indexes on Query Design 14. Part 4: Working with Your Data on the Modern Data Platform
15. Chapter 11: Handling JSON Data in SQL Server 16. Chapter 12: Integrating File Data and Data Lake Content with SQL 17. Chapter 13: Organizing and Sharing Your Queries with Jupyter Notebooks 18. Index 19. Other Books You May Enjoy Appendix: Preparing Your Environment

Using ISNULL() function

The ISNULL() function is used to return the defined input value in case the passed-in expression has NULL as its value. It only accepts two parameters and only evaluates the passed-in expression. We will walk through a few simple examples of it and do a comparison between ISNULL() and COALESCE() in this section.

How to use ISNULL()

Let’s jump into the examples!

Run the following code in SSMS:

SELECT ISNULL('Hello', 'World') AS [Output]

The result returned is as follows:

Figure 4.14 – Result of the query

Figure 4.14 – Result of the query

As we can see, when we pass in two VARCHAR values, the function evaluates the first one (in this case, Hello) and determines it is not a NULL value, so it returns the Hello value itself as result.

Now, run the following chunk of code:

SELECT ISNULL(NULL, 'World') AS [Output]

The result we get this time is as follows:

Figure 4.15 – Result of the query

Figure 4.15 –...

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