NVL (SQL)
Synopsis
NVL(check-expression,replace-expression)
Description
NVL evaluates check-expression and returns one of two values:
-
If check-expression is NULL, replace-expression is returned.
-
If check-expression is not NULL, check-expression is returned.
The arguments check-expression and replace-expression can have any data type. If their data types are different, SQL converts replace-expression to the data type of check-expression before comparing them. The data type of the return value is always the same as the data type of check-expression, unless check-expression is character data, in which case the return value’s data type is VARCHAR2.
Note that NVL is supported for Oracle compatibility, and is the same as the ISNULL function.
Refer to NULL for further details on NULL handling.
DATE and TIME Display Conversion
Some check-expression data types require conversion from Logical mode to ODBC mode or Display mode. For example the DATE and TIME data types. If the replace-expression value is not the same data type, this value cannot be converted in ODBC mode or Display mode, and an SQLCODE error is generated: -146 for DATE data type; -147 for TIME data type. For example, ISNULL(DOB,'nodate') cannot be executed in ODBC mode or Display mode; it issue an SQLCODE -146 error with the %msg Error: 'nodate' is an invalid ODBC/JDBC Date value or Error: 'nodate' is an invalid DISPLAY Date value. To execute this statement in ODBC mode or Display mode, you must CAST the value as the appropriate data type: ISNULL(DOB,CAST('nodate' as DATE)). This results in a date 0, which displays as 1840-12-31.
Arguments
check-expression
The expression to be evaluated.
replace-expression
The expression that is returned if check-expression is NULL.
NVL returns the same data type as check-expression.
NULL Handling Functions Compared
The following table shows the various SQL comparison functions. Each function returns one value if the logical comparison tests True (A same as B) and another value if the logical comparison tests False (A not same as B). These functions allow you to perform NULL logical comparisons. You cannot specify NULL in an actual equality (or non-equality) condition comparison.
SQL Function | Comparison Test | Return Value |
---|---|---|
NVL(ex1,ex2) | ex1 = NULL |
True returns ex2 False returns ex1 |
IFNULL(ex1,ex2) [two-argument form] | ex1 = NULL |
True returns ex2 False returns NULL |
IFNULL(ex1,ex2,ex3) [three-argument form] | ex1 = NULL |
True returns ex2 False returns ex3 |
{fn IFNULL(ex1,ex2)} | ex1 = NULL |
True returns ex2 False returns ex1 |
ISNULL(ex1,ex2) | ex1 = NULL |
True returns ex2 False returns ex1 |
NULLIF(ex1,ex2) | ex1 = ex2 |
True returns NULL False returns ex1 |
COALESCE(ex1,ex2,...) | ex = NULL for each argument |
True tests next ex argument. If all ex arguments are True (NULL), returns NULL. False returns ex |
Examples
This following example returns the replace-expression (99) because the check-expression is NULL:
SELECT NVL(NULL,99) AS NullTest
This following example returns the check-expression (33) because check-expression is not NULL:
SELECT NVL(33,99) AS NullTest
The following example returns the string 'No Preference' if FavoriteColors is NULL; otherwise, it returns the value of FavoriteColors:
SELECT Name, NVL(FavoriteColors,'No Preference') AS ColorChoice
FROM Sample.Person