Divide By Zero Error In Sql
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By Chris FehilyJul 25, 2008 Topics: ProductivitySuppose you divide by zero error in sql server want to calculate the male–female ratios for various school divide by zero error encountered in sql server 2012 clubs, but you discover that the following query fails and issues a divide-by-zero error when msg 8134 level 16 state 1 line 1 divide by zero error encountered it tries to calculate ratio for the Lord of the Rings Club, which has no women: SELECT club_id, males, females, males/females AS ratio sql nullif FROM school_clubs; You can use the function NULLIF to avoid division by zero. NULLIF compares two expressions and returns null if they are equal or the first expression otherwise. Rewrite the query as: SELECT club_id, males, females, males/NULLIF(females, 0) AS ratio FROM school_clubs; Any number divided by
Sql Nullif Function
NULL gives NULL, and no error is generated. Be sure to look back over my posts this week for more SQL tips. And for more on SQL, be sure to check out my book SQL: Visual QuickStart Guide, 3rd Edition. Share|Share on twitter Share on facebook Share on google Share on email✉ Other Things You Might LikeData at Work: Best practices for creating effective charts and information graphics in Microsoft Excel By Jorge CamõesBook $35.99Speaker Camp Workshop: Learn by Video By Russ Unger, Samantha StarmerDVD $39.99Windows 8: Visual QuickStart Guide By Barrie SosinskyBook $27.99 View Your Cart Account Sign InSearchSearch View Your Cart 👤 Account Sign In Create AccountTopicsAdobe PhotoshopAppleDesignDigital PhotographyDigital VideoGadgetsProductivity Web Design & Development StoreBookseBooksVideoWeb EditionsAuthorsSafariExploreAbout UsAcademic ResourcesAffiliatesArticlesBlogsNewslettersPressUser GroupsAboutAffiliatesContact UsJobsLegal NoticePrivacy PolicyPressPromotionsSite MapWrite for Us © 2016 Pearson Education, Peachpit. All rights reserved. 1301 Sansome Street, San Francisco, CA 94111
NULLIF() To Prevent Divide-By-Zero Errors In SQL By Ben Nadel on October 3, 2007 Tags: SQL Boyan Kostadinov just sent me a cool link to an article that
Sql Iszero
is the final part in a four part series that discusses the how to fix divide by zero error in sql server SQL NULL value. I haven't read the first three parts yet, but there is a really cool tip in the tsql divide by zero error encountered fourth part on using NULLIF() to prevent divide-by-zero errors in a SQL call.The idea here is that, as with any other form of math that I know of, you cannot divide http://www.peachpit.com/blogs/blog.aspx?uk=Avoiding-division-by-zero-with-NULLIF-Five-SQL-Tips-in-Five-Days-Part-5- by zero in a SQL call. Therefore, running this code:
OK, some of the data I am using isnt playing nicely and once in a while I get Divide by zero error encountered. Divide by zero error encountered. Msg 8134, https://ask.sqlservercentral.com/questions/22402/best-way-to-avoid-divide-by-zero.html Level 16, State 1, Line 2 To avoid this I am using a http://www.peachpit.com/blogs/blog.aspx?uk=Avoiding-division-by-zero-with-NULLIF-Five-SQL-Tips-in-Five-Days-Part-5- CASE as: DECLARE @Int1 AS INT , @Int2 AS INT SET @Int1 = 6 SET @Int2 = 2 SELECT @Int1 / @Int2 SET @Int1 = 6 SET @Int2 = 0 SELECT @Int1 / CASE WHEN @Int2 = 0 THEN 1 ELSE @Int2 END is there a better way of getting the divide by same results but without littering by nice tidy SELECT statements with hundreds of CASE WHEN ... THEN ... ELSE ... END's?? Am I missing some super useful function that does this in one line? [edit]OK, thanks for the answers so far. I dont want to lose rows where it is zero so, I cant accept a NULL in its place or to filter out divide by zero those rows with a WHERE @int20 I simply want to replace a 0 value with a 1 value... more ▼ 0 total comments 973 characters / 178 words asked Oct 14, 2010 at 08:54 AM in Default Fatherjack ♦♦ 43.7k ● 79 ● 98 ● 117 edited Oct 14, 2010 at 11:03 AM add new comment (comments are locked) 10|1200 characters needed characters left ▼ Everyone Moderators Original poster and moderators Other... Viewable by all users 4 answers: sort voted first ▼ oldest newest voted first 0 You can use NULLIF if you want to return null when division by zero: SELECT @int1 / NULLIF(@int2,0) -- returns NULL or SELECT @int1 / ISNULL(NULLIF(@int2,0),1) -- returns @int1 The CASE statement is probably much faster then the second option, but you can test the performance more ▼ 11 total comments 288 characters / 46 words answered Oct 14, 2010 at 09:04 AM Håkan Winther 16.5k ● 36 ● 45 ● 57 edited Oct 14, 2010 at 09:07 AM Always though about CASE on this one. Good to know about NULLIF Oct 14, 2010 at 09:07 AM ozamora Håkan Winther Nope, the case s
By Chris FehilyJul 25, 2008 Topics: ProductivitySuppose you want to calculate the male–female ratios for various school clubs, but you discover that the following query fails and issues a divide-by-zero error when it tries to calculate ratio for the Lord of the Rings Club, which has no women: SELECT club_id, males, females, males/females AS ratio FROM school_clubs; You can use the function NULLIF to avoid division by zero. NULLIF compares two expressions and returns null if they are equal or the first expression otherwise. Rewrite the query as: SELECT club_id, males, females, males/NULLIF(females, 0) AS ratio FROM school_clubs; Any number divided by NULL gives NULL, and no error is generated. Be sure to look back over my posts this week for more SQL tips. And for more on SQL, be sure to check out my book SQL: Visual QuickStart Guide, 3rd Edition. Share|Share on twitter Share on facebook Share on google Share on email✉ Other Things You Might LikeData at Work: Best practices for creating effective charts and information graphics in Microsoft Excel By Jorge CamõesBook $35.99Speaker Camp Workshop: Learn by Video By Russ Unger, Samantha StarmerDVD $39.99Windows 8: Visual QuickStart Guide By Barrie SosinskyBook $27.99 View Your Cart Account Sign InSearchSearch View Your Cart 👤 Account Sign In Create AccountTopicsAdobe PhotoshopAppleDesignDigital PhotographyDigital VideoGadgetsProductivity Web Design & Development StoreBookseBooksVideoWeb EditionsAuthorsSafariExploreAbout UsAcademic ResourcesAffiliatesArticlesBlogsNewslettersPressUser GroupsAboutAffiliatesContact UsJobsLegal NoticePrivacy PolicyPressPromotionsSite MapWrite for Us © 2016 Pearson Education, Peachpit. All rights reserved. 1301 Sansome Street, San Francisco, CA 94111