Works like a cascading “if-then-else” statement. In the more general form, a series of conditions are evaluated in sequence. When a condition evaluates to TRUE, the evaluation stops and the associated result (after THEN) is returned. If none of the conditions evaluate to TRUE, then the result after the optional ELSE is returned, if present; otherwise NULL is returned.
In the second, “shorthand” form, the expression after CASE is compared to each of the WHEN expressions in sequence, until one matches; then the associated result (after THEN) is returned. If none of the expressions match, the result after the optional ELSE is returned, if present; otherwise NULL is returned.
Note that in the second form, a NULL CASE expression matches none of the WHEN expressions, even if one of the WHEN expressions is also NULL.
CASE WHEN <condition1> THEN <result1> [ WHEN <condition2> THEN <result2> ] [ ... ] [ ELSE <result3> ] END CASE <expr> WHEN <value1> THEN <result1> [ WHEN <value2> THEN <result2> ] [ ... ] [ ELSE <result3> ] END
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Arguments¶condition#
In the first form of CASE
, each condition is an expression that should evaluate to a BOOLEAN value (True, False, or NULL).
expr
A general expression.
value
In the second form of CASE
, each value
is a potential match for expr
. The value
can be a literal or an expression. The value
must be the same data type as the expr
, or must be a data type that can be cast to the data type of the expr
.
result#
In the first form of the CASE
clause, if condition#
is true, then the function returns the corresponding result#
. If more than one condition is true, then the result associated with the first true condition is returned.
In the second form of the CASE
statement, if value#
matches the expr
, then the corresponding result
is returned. If more than one value
matches the expr
, then the first matching value’s result
is returned.
The result should be an expression that evaluates to a single value.
In both forms of CASE
, if the optional ELSE
clause is present, and if no matches are found, then the function returns the result in the ELSE
clause. If no ELSE
clause is present, and no matches are found, then the result is NULL.
Note that, contrary to DECODE, a NULL value in the condition does not match a NULL value elsewhere in the condition. For example WHEN <null_expr> = NULL THEN 'Return me!'
does not return “Return me!”. If you want to compare to NULL values, use IS NULL
rather than = NULL
.
The condition#
, expr
, value
, and result
can all be general expressions and thus can include subqueries that include set operators, such as UNION
, INTERSECT
, EXCEPT
, and MINUS
. When using set operators, make sure that data types are compatible. For details, see the General usage notes in the Set operators topic.
In the first form of CASE
, each expression is independent, and the collation specifications in different branches are independent. For example, in the following, the collation specifications in condition1
are independent of the collation specification(s) in condition2
, and those collation specifications do not need to be identical or even compatible.
CASE WHEN <condition1> THEN <result1> [ WHEN <condition2> THEN <result2> ]
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In the second form of CASE
, although all collation-related operations must use compatible collation specifications, the collation specifications do not need to be identical. For example, in the following statement, the collation specifications of both value1
and value2
must be compatible with the collation specification of expr
, but the collation specifications of value1
and value2
do not need to be identical to each other or to the collation specification of expr
.
CASE <expr> WHEN <value1> THEN <result1> [ WHEN <value2> THEN <result2> ] ...Copy
The value returned from the function has the highest-precedence collation of the THEN
/ELSE
arguments.
This example shows a typical use of CASE:
SELECT column1, CASE WHEN column1=1 THEN 'one' WHEN column1=2 THEN 'two' ELSE 'other' END AS result FROM (values(1),(2),(3)) v;
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+---------+--------+ | COLUMN1 | RESULT | |---------+--------| | 1 | one | | 2 | two | | 3 | other | +---------+--------+
This example shows that if none of the values match, and there is no ELSE clause, then the value returned is NULL:
SELECT column1, CASE WHEN column1=1 THEN 'one' WHEN column1=2 THEN 'two' END AS result FROM (values(1),(2),(3)) v;
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+---------+--------+ | COLUMN1 | RESULT | |---------+--------| | 1 | one | | 2 | two | | 3 | NULL | +---------+--------+
This example handles NULL explicitly.
SELECT column1, CASE WHEN column1 = 1 THEN 'one' WHEN column1 = 2 THEN 'two' WHEN column1 IS NULL THEN 'NULL' ELSE 'other' END AS result FROM VALUES (1), (2), (NULL);
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+---------+--------+ | COLUMN1 | RESULT | |---------+--------| | 1 | one | | 2 | two | | NULL | NULL | +---------+--------+
The following examples combine CASE with collation:
SELECT CASE COLLATE('m', 'upper') WHEN 'M' THEN TRUE ELSE FALSE END;
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+----------------------------+ | CASE COLLATE('M', 'UPPER') | | WHEN 'M' THEN TRUE | | ELSE FALSE | | END | |----------------------------| | True | +----------------------------+
SELECT CASE 'm' WHEN COLLATE('M', 'lower') THEN TRUE ELSE FALSE END;
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+------------------------------------------+ | CASE 'M' | | WHEN COLLATE('M', 'LOWER') THEN TRUE | | ELSE FALSE | | END | |------------------------------------------| | True | +------------------------------------------+
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