I have a column in a table which might contain null or empty values. How do I check if a column is empty or null in the rows present in a table?
[e.g. null or '' or ' ' or ' ' and ...]
asked Dec 12, 2011 at 6:49
3
This will select all rows where some_col
is NULL
or ''
[empty string]
SELECT * FROM table WHERE some_col IS NULL OR some_col = '';
answered Dec 12, 2011 at 6:54
mačekmaček
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As defined by the SQL-92 Standard, when comparing two strings of differing widths, the narrower value is right-padded with spaces to make it is same width as the wider value. Therefore, all string values that consist entirely of spaces [including zero spaces] will be deemed to be equal e.g.
'' = ' ' IS TRUE
'' = ' ' IS TRUE
' ' = ' ' IS TRUE
' ' = ' ' IS TRUE
etc
Therefore, this should work regardless of how many spaces make up the some_col
value:
SELECT *
FROM T
WHERE some_col IS NULL
OR some_col = ' ';
or more succinctly:
SELECT *
FROM T
WHERE NULLIF[some_col, ' '] IS NULL;
answered Dec 12, 2011 at 12:28
onedaywhenonedaywhen
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A shorter way to write the condition:
WHERE some_col > ''
Since null > ''
produces unknown
, this has the effect of filtering out both null
and empty strings.
answered Jun 30, 2013 at 16:24
AndomarAndomar
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Please mind: the best practice it at the end of the answer.
You can test whether a column is null or is not null using WHERE col IS NULL
or WHERE col IS NOT NULL
e.g.
SELECT myCol
FROM MyTable
WHERE MyCol IS NULL
In your example you have various permutations of white space. You can strip white space using TRIM
and you can
use COALESCE
to default a NULL value [COALESCE will return the first non-null value from the values you suppy.
e.g.
SELECT myCol
FROM MyTable
WHERE TRIM[COALESCE[MyCol, '']] = ''
This final query will return rows where MyCol
is null or is any length of whitespace.
If you can avoid it, it's better not to have a function on a column in the WHERE clause as it makes it difficult to use an index. If you simply want to check if a column is null or empty, you may be better off doing this:
SELECT myCol
FROM MyTable
WHERE MyCol IS NULL OR MyCol = ''
See TRIM COALESCE and IS NULL for more info.
Also Working with null values from the MySQL docs
answered Dec 12, 2011 at 6:52
Code MagicianCode Magician
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Another method without WHERE, try this..
Will select both Empty and NULL values
SELECT ISNULL[NULLIF[fieldname,'']] FROM tablename
answered Jan 3, 2016 at 17:06
PodTech.ioPodTech.io
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Either
SELECT IF[field1 IS NULL or field1 = '', 'empty', field1] as field1 from tablename
or
SELECT case when field1 IS NULL or field1 = ''
then 'empty'
else field1
end as field1 from tablename
answered Jun 7, 2017 at 3:48
This statement is much cleaner and more readable for me:
select * from my_table where ISNULL[NULLIF[some_col, '']];
answered May 30, 2016 at 16:10
AmaynutAmaynut
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try
SELECT 0 IS NULL , '' IS NULL , NULL IS NULL
-> 0, 0, 1
or
SELECT ISNULL[' '] , ISNULL[ NULL ]
-> 0 ,1
Reference
answered Dec 12, 2011 at 6:53
diEchodiEcho
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I hate messy fields in my databases. If the column might be a blank string or null, I'd rather fix this before doing the select each time, like this:
UPDATE MyTable SET MyColumn=NULL WHERE MyColumn='';
SELECT * FROM MyTable WHERE MyColumn IS NULL
This keeps the data tidy, as long as you don't specifically need to differentiate between NULL and empty for some reason.
answered Dec 3, 2014 at 17:16
1
While checking null or Empty
value for a column in my project, I noticed that there are some support concern in various Databases.
Every Database doesn't support TRIM
method.
Below is the matrix just to understand the supported methods by different databases.
The TRIM function in SQL is used to remove specified prefix or suffix from a string. The most common pattern being removed is white spaces. This function is called differently in different databases:
- MySQL:
TRIM[], RTRIM[], LTRIM[]
- Oracle:
RTRIM[], LTRIM[]
- SQL Server:
RTRIM[], LTRIM[]
How to Check Empty/Null :-
Below are two different ways according to different Databases-
The syntax for these trim functions are:
Use of Trim to check-
SELECT FirstName FROM UserDetails WHERE TRIM[LastName] IS NULL
Use of LTRIM & RTRIM to check-
SELECT FirstName FROM UserDetails WHERE LTRIM[RTRIM[LastName]] IS NULL
Above both ways provide same result just use based on your DataBase support. It Just returns the FirstName
from UserDetails
table if it has an empty LastName
Hoping this will help you :]
answered Oct 21, 2016 at 20:58
Vikash PandeyVikash Pandey
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If you want to have NULL values presented last when doing an ORDER BY, try this:
SELECT * FROM my_table WHERE NULLIF[some_col, ''] IS NULL;
answered Dec 12, 2011 at 6:52
GhostmanGhostman
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0
You can also do
SELECT * FROM table WHERE column_name LIKE ''
The inverse being
SELECT * FROM table WHERE column_name NOT LIKE ''
answered Jun 22, 2017 at 3:18
brenjtbrenjt
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SELECT * FROM tbl WHERE trim[IFNULL[col,'']] '';
Paul Roub
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answered Feb 12, 2019 at 15:47
3
My two cents.
In MySQL you can use the COALESCE
function:
Returns the first non-NULL value in the list, or NULL if there are no non-NULL values.
So you can simplify your query like this:
SELECT * FROM table WHERE COALESCE[some_col, ''] = '';
answered Sep 8, 2021 at 9:54
PiozPioz
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select * from table where length[RTRIM[LTRIM[column_name]]] > 0
answered Jan 25, 2019 at 13:15
Hakan IlgarHakan Ilgar
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In my case, space was entered in
the column during the data import and though it looked like an empty column its length was 1. So first of all I checked the length of the empty looking column using length[column]
then based on this we can write search query
SELECT * FROM TABLE WHERE LENGHT[COLUMN]= 0;
answered Feb 20, 2019 at 15:46
MR ANDMR AND
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1
The below SQL query works fine.
SELECT * FROM WHERE IS NULL;
answered Mar 23 at 13:55
try this if the datatype are string and row is null
SELECT * FROM table WHERE column_name IS NULL OR column_name = ''
if the datatype are int or column are 0 then try this
SELECT * FROM table WHERE column_name > = 0
answered Mar 31, 2017 at 3:00
Get rows with NULL, 0, '', ' ', ' '
SELECT * FROM table WHERE some_col IS NOT TRUE;
Get rows without NULL, 0, '', ' ', ' '
SELECT * FROM table WHERE some_col IS TRUE;
answered Sep 23, 2020 at 19:41
ArthurArthur
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SELECT column_name FROM table_name WHERE column_name IN [NULL, '']
Nathan Tuggy
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answered Jun 7, 2017 at 2:59
2