SQL is null and = null [duplicate]
Possible Duplicate:
what is “=null” and “ IS NULL”
Is there any difference between IS NULL and =NULL
What is the difference between
where x is null
and
where x = null
and why does the latter not work?
Solution 1:
In SQL, a comparison between a null
value and any other value (including another null
) using a comparison operator (eg =
, !=
, <
, etc) will result in a null
, which is considered as false
for the purposes of a where clause (strictly speaking, it's "not true", rather than "false", but the effect is the same).
The reasoning is that a null
means "unknown", so the result of any comparison to a null
is also "unknown". So you'll get no hit on rows by coding where my_column = null
.
SQL provides the special syntax for testing if a column is null
, via is null
and is not null
, which is a special condition to test for a null
(or not a null
).
Here's some SQL showing a variety of conditions and and their effect as per above.
create table t (x int, y int);
insert into t values (null, null), (null, 1), (1, 1);
select 'x = null' as test , x, y from t where x = null
union all
select 'x != null', x, y from t where x != null
union all
select 'not (x = null)', x, y from t where not (x = null)
union all
select 'x = y', x, y from t where x = y
union all
select 'not (x = y)', x, y from t where not (x = y);
returns only 1 row (as expected):
TEST X Y
x = y 1 1
See this running on SQLFiddle
Solution 2:
It's important to note, that NULL doesn't equal NULL.
NULL
is not a value, and therefore cannot be compared to another value.
where x is null
checks whether x is a null value.
where x = null
is checking whether x equals NULL, which will never be true
Solution 3:
First is correct way of checking whether a field value is null
while later won't work the way you expect it to because null
is special value which does not equal anything, so you can't use equality comparison using =
for it.
So when you need to check if a field value is null
or not, use:
where x is null
instead of:
where x = null
Solution 4:
I think that equality is something that can be absolutely determined. The trouble with null
is that it's inherently unknown. Null
combined with any other value is null
- unknown. Asking SQL "Is my value equal to null
?" would be unknown every single time, even if the input is null
. I think the implementation of IS NULL
makes it clear.