On 5/9/05, Mark Fenbers <Mark.Fenbers@noaa.gov> wrote:
> I want to update a column in myTable. The value this column is set to
> depends on a nested select statement which sometimes returns 0 rows instead
> of 1. This is a problem since the column I'm trying to update is set to
> refuse nulls. Here's a sample:
>
> update myTable set myColumn = (Select altColumn from altTable where
> altColumn != 'XXX' limit 1) where myColumn = 'XXX';
>
> MyColumn cannot accept nulls, but sometimes "Select altColumn ..." returns
> 0 rows, and thus, the query fails.
>
> Is there a way to set a default value to be inserted into myColumn if and
> when "select altColumn ..." returns zero rows?
>
> Mark
Mark,
You can work around this by using a CASE statement. In this case, test
for a NULL from your subquery. This is not elegant at all, but it
should do what you are wanting.
update myTable set myColumn = (CASE WHEN (Select altColumn from altTable where altColumn != 'XXX'
limit 1) IS NULL THEN 'some default value' ELSE (Select altColumn from altTable where altColumn != 'XXX' limit 1)
END)
where myColumn = 'XXX';
Hope this helps...
Tony