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sql server - Is there a way to simplify a NULL compare of 2 values

This is my simplified statement

SELECT ...
FROM tab1 AS i FULL OUTER JOIN tab2 AS d ON i.[Id]=d.[Id] 
WHERE d.[Data]<>i.[Data] OR 
    (d.[Data] IS NULL AND i.[Data] IS NOT NULL) OR 
    (d.[Data] IS NOT NULL AND i.[Data] IS NULL)

I want to get all entries that are

  1. i.[Data] is different from d.[Data]
  2. At least one value in table i or d is NOT NULL

So I don't want to see records were and i and d contain the same data or are both NULL.

My statement look so long and complicated. Is there an easier way?

Using ISNULL(d.[Data],'')<>ISNULL(i.[Data],'') works for text, but not for DATE or TIME(0) columns.

My statement works for every type.

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1 Answer

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Yes you can, and you can get the optimizer to recognize it too.

Paul White has this little ditty:

WHERE NOT EXISTS (
    SELECT d.[Data]
    INTERSECT
    SELECT i.[Data])

This works because of the semantics of INTERSECT which deal with nulls. What this says is "are there no rows in the subquery made up of value B and value B", this will only be satisfied if they are different values or one is null and the other not. If both are nulls, there will be a row with a null.


If you check the XML query plan (not the graphical one in SSMS), you will see that it compiles all the way down to d.[Data] <> i.[Data], but the operator it uses will have CompareOp="IS" and not EQ.

See the full plan here.

The relevant part of the plan is:

                <Predicate>
                  <ScalarOperator ScalarString="@t1.[i] as [t1].[i] = @t2.[i] as [t2].[i]">
                    <Compare CompareOp="IS">
                      <ScalarOperator>
                        <Identifier>
                          <ColumnReference Table="@t1" Alias="[t1]" Column="i" />
                        </Identifier>
                      </ScalarOperator>
                      <ScalarOperator>
                        <Identifier>
                          <ColumnReference Table="@t2" Alias="[t2]" Column="i" />
                        </Identifier>
                      </ScalarOperator>
                    </Compare>
                  </ScalarOperator>
                </Predicate>

I find the optimizer works very well this way round, rather than doing EXISTS / EXCEPT.


I urge you to vote for the Azure Feedback to implement a proper operator


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