As shown below, I need not null values to be at the start of all output fields.
I have a table with three fields, FirstName, LastName and Email. Here's some dummy data: … Now, if I do: … Vitals for Joe is null, as there is a single null field. How do you overcome this behaviour?
What is the difference between … and … and why does the latter not work?
I have following data in my table "devices" … I executed below query … It returns result given below … How to come out of this so that it should ignore NULL AND result should be …
If I have the table … This will display Firstname-Middlename-Surname e.g. … The second one (Jane’s) displays correct, however since John doesn’t have a middlename, I want it to ignore the second dash.
How can I run a MySQL query that selects everything that is not null? It would be something like … Do I just remove the all and go..?
Note: A NULL value is different from a zero value or a field that contains spaces.
In SQL, the NULL value is never true in comparison to any other value, even NULL. An expression that contains NULL always produces a NULL value unless otherwise indicated in the documentation for the operators and functions involved in the expression. All columns in the following example return NULL
SQL’s NULL indicates absent data. NULL propagates through expressions and needs distinct
NULL is special in SQL. NULL indicates that the data is unknown, inapplicable or even does not