Lets consider I have a ta开发者_StackOverflow中文版ble 'Tab' which has a column 'Col'
The table 'Tab' has this data -
Col
1
2
3
4
5
If I have a set of values (2,3,6,7). I can query the values that are present in the table and the list by suing the query
Select Col from Tab where col IN (2,3,6,7)
But, if I want to return the values in the list that are not present in the table i.e. only (6,7) in this case. What query should I use?
The problem I believe is that your trying to find values from you in statement. What you need to do is turn your in statement into a table and then you can determine which values are different.
create table #temp
(
value int
)
insert into #temp values 1
insert into #temp values 2
insert into #temp values 3
insert into #temp values 4
select
id
from
#temp
where
not exists (select 1 from Tab where Col = id)
A better alternative would be to create a table-valued function to turn your comma-delimited string into a table. I don't have any code handy, but it should be easy to find on Google. In that case you would only need to use the syntax below.
select
id
from
dbo.SplitStringToTable('2,3,6,7')
where
not exists (select 1 from Tab where Col = id)
Hope this helps
A SQL Server 2008 method
SELECT N FROM (VALUES(2),(3),(6),(7)) AS D (N)
EXCEPT
Select Col from Tab
Or SQL Server 2005
DECLARE @Values XML
SET @Values =
'<r>
<v>2</v>
<v>3</v>
<v>6</v>
<v>7</v>
</r>'
SELECT
vals.item.value('.[1]', 'INT') AS Val
FROM @Values.nodes('/r/v') vals(item)
EXCEPT
Select Col from Tab
one way would be to use a temp table:
DECLARE @t1 TABLE (i INT)
INSERT @t1 VALUES(2)
INSERT @t1 VALUES(3)
INSERT @t1 VALUES(6)
INSERT @t1 VALUES(7)
SELECT i FROM @t1 WHERE i NOT IN (Select Col from Tab)
One method is
declare @table table(col int)
insert into @table
select 1 union all
select 2 union all
select 3 union all
select 4 union all
select 5
declare @t table(col int)
insert into @t
select 2 union all
select 3 union all
select 6 union all
select 7
select t1.col from @t as t1 left join @table as t2 on t1.col=t2.col
where t2.col is null
Do you have a [numbers] table in your database? (See Why should I consider using an auxiliary numbers table?)
SELECT
[Tab].*
FROM
[numbers]
LEFT JOIN [Tab]
ON [numbers].[num] = [Tab].[Col]
WHERE
[numbers].[num] IN (2, 3, 6, 7)
AND [Tab].[Col] IS NULL
I think there are many ways to achive this, here is one.
SELECT a.col
FROM
(SELECT 2 AS col UNION ALL SELECT 3 UNION ALL SELECT 6 UNION ALL SELECT 7) AS a
WHERE a.col NOT IN (SELECT col FROM Tab)
Late to the party...
SELECT
'2s' = SUM(CASE WHEN Tab.Col = 2 THEN 1 ELSE 0 END),
'3s' = SUM(CASE WHEN Tab.Col = 3 THEN 1 ELSE 0 END),
'6s' = SUM(CASE WHEN Tab.Col = 6 THEN 1 ELSE 0 END),
'7s' = SUM(CASE WHEN Tab.Col = 7 THEN 1 ELSE 0 END)
FROM
(SELECT 1 AS Col, 'Nums' = 1 UNION SELECT 2 AS Col,'Nums' = 1 UNION SELECT 3 AS Col, 'Nums' = 1 UNION SELECT 4 AS Col, 'Nums' = 1 UNION SELECT 5 AS Col, 'Nums' = 1 ) AS Tab
GROUP BY Tab.Nums
BTW, mine also gives counts of each, useful if you need it. Like if you were checking a product list against what you have in inventory. Though you can write a pivot for that better, just don't know how off the top of my head.
精彩评论