This browser is no longer supported.

Upgrade to Microsoft Edge to take advantage of the latest features, security updates, and technical support.

Download Microsoft Edge More info about Internet Explorer and Microsoft Edge Azure Synapse Analytics Analytics Platform System (PDW)

Evaluates a list of conditions and returns one of multiple possible result expressions.

The CASE expression has two formats:

  • The simple CASE expression compares an expression to a set of simple expressions to determine the result.

  • The searched CASE expression evaluates a set of Boolean expressions to determine the result.

    Both formats support an optional ELSE argument.

    CASE can be used in any statement or clause that allows a valid expression. For example, you can use CASE in statements such as SELECT, UPDATE, DELETE and SET, and in clauses such as <select_list> , IN, WHERE, ORDER BY, and HAVING.

    Transact-SQL syntax conventions

    Syntax

    Syntax for SQL Server, Azure SQL Database and Azure Synapse Analytics.

    -- Simple CASE expression:
    CASE input_expression
         WHEN when_expression THEN result_expression [ ...n ]
         [ ELSE else_result_expression ]
    -- Searched CASE expression:
         WHEN Boolean_expression THEN result_expression [ ...n ]
         [ ELSE else_result_expression ]
    

    Syntax for Parallel Data Warehouse.

    WHEN when_expression THEN result_expression [ ...n ] [ ELSE else_result_expression ]

    To view Transact-SQL syntax for SQL Server 2014 and earlier, see Previous versions documentation.

    Arguments

    input_expression

    The expression evaluated when the simple CASE format is used. input_expression is any valid expression.

    WHEN when_expression

    A simple expression to which input_expression is compared when the simple CASE format is used. when_expression is any valid expression. The data types of input_expression and each when_expression must be the same or must be an implicit conversion.

    THEN result_expression

    The expression returned when input_expression equals when_expression evaluates to TRUE, or Boolean_expression evaluates to TRUE. result expression is any valid expression.

    ELSE else_result_expression

    The expression returned if no comparison operation evaluates to TRUE. If this argument is omitted and no comparison operation evaluates to TRUE, CASE returns NULL. else_result_expression is any valid expression. The data types of else_result_expression and any result_expression must be the same or must be an implicit conversion.

    WHEN Boolean_expression

    The Boolean expression evaluated when using the searched CASE format. Boolean_expression is any valid Boolean expression.

    To view Transact-SQL syntax for SQL Server 2014 and earlier, see Previous versions documentation.

    Return types

    Returns the highest precedence type from the set of types in result_expressions and the optional else_result_expression. For more information, see Data Type Precedence (Transact-SQL).

    Return values

    Simple CASE expression:

    The simple CASE expression operates by comparing the first expression to the expression in each WHEN clause for equivalency. If these expressions are equivalent, the expression in the THEN clause will be returned.

  • Allows only an equality check.

  • In the order specified, evaluates input_expression = when_expression for each WHEN clause.

  • Returns the result_expression of the first input_expression = when_expression that evaluates to TRUE.

  • If no input_expression = when_expression evaluates to TRUE, the SQL Server Database Engine returns the else_result_expression if an ELSE clause is specified, or a NULL value if no ELSE clause is specified.

    Searched CASE expression:

  • Evaluates, in the order specified, Boolean_expression for each WHEN clause.

  • Returns result_expression of the first Boolean_expression that evaluates to TRUE.

  • If no Boolean_expression evaluates to TRUE, the Database Engine returns the else_result_expression if an ELSE clause is specified, or a NULL value if no ELSE clause is specified.

    Remarks

    SQL Server allows for only 10 levels of nesting in CASE expressions.

    The CASE expression can't be used to control the flow of execution of Transact-SQL statements, statement blocks, user-defined functions, and stored procedures. For a list of control-of-flow methods, see Control-of-Flow Language (Transact-SQL).

    The CASE expression evaluates its conditions sequentially and stops with the first condition whose condition is satisfied. In some situations, an expression is evaluated before a CASE expression receives the results of the expression as its input. Errors in evaluating these expressions are possible. Aggregate expressions that appear in WHEN arguments to a CASE expression are evaluated first, then provided to the CASE expression. For example, the following query produces a divide by zero error when producing the value of the MAX aggregate. This occurs prior to evaluating the CASE expression.

    WITH Data (value)
        SELECT 0
        UNION ALL
        SELECT 1
    SELECT CASE
            WHEN MIN(value) <= 0 THEN 0
            WHEN MAX(1 / value) >= 100 THEN 1
    FROM Data;
    

    You should only depend on order of evaluation of the WHEN conditions for scalar expressions (including non-correlated subqueries that return scalars), not for aggregate expressions.

    You must also ensure that at least one of the expressions in the THEN or ELSE clauses isn't the NULL constant. While NULL can be returned from multiple result expressions, not all of these can explicitly be the NULL constant. If all result expressions use the NULL constant, error 8133 is returned.

    Examples

    A. Use a SELECT statement with a simple CASE expression

    Within a SELECT statement, a simple CASE expression allows for only an equality check; no other comparisons are made. The following example uses the CASE expression to change the display of product line categories to make them more understandable.

    USE AdventureWorks2019;
    SELECT ProductNumber,
        Category = CASE ProductLine
            WHEN 'R' THEN 'Road'
            WHEN 'M' THEN 'Mountain'
            WHEN 'T' THEN 'Touring'
            WHEN 'S' THEN 'Other sale items'
            ELSE 'Not for sale'
    FROM Production.Product
    ORDER BY ProductNumber;
    

    B. Use a SELECT statement with a searched CASE expression

    Within a SELECT statement, the searched CASE expression allows for values to be replaced in the result set based on comparison values. The following example displays the list price as a text comment based on the price range for a product.

    USE AdventureWorks2019;
    SELECT ProductNumber,
        Name,
        "Price Range" = CASE
            WHEN ListPrice = 0 THEN 'Mfg item - not for resale'
            WHEN ListPrice < 50 THEN 'Under $50'
            WHEN ListPrice >= 50 AND ListPrice < 250 THEN 'Under $250'
            WHEN ListPrice >= 250 AND ListPrice < 1000 THEN 'Under $1000'
            ELSE 'Over $1000'
    FROM Production.Product
    ORDER BY ProductNumber;
    

    C. Use CASE in an ORDER BY clause

    The following examples use the CASE expression in an ORDER BY clause to determine the sort order of the rows based on a given column value. In the first example, the value in the SalariedFlag column of the HumanResources.Employee table is evaluated. Employees that have the SalariedFlag set to 1 are returned in order by the BusinessEntityID in descending order. Employees that have the SalariedFlag set to 0 are returned in order by the BusinessEntityID in ascending order. In the second example, the result set is ordered by the column TerritoryName when the column CountryRegionName is equal to 'United States' and by CountryRegionName for all other rows.

    SELECT BusinessEntityID,
        SalariedFlag
    FROM HumanResources.Employee
    ORDER BY CASE SalariedFlag
            WHEN 1 THEN BusinessEntityID
            END DESC,
            WHEN SalariedFlag = 0 THEN BusinessEntityID
    
    SELECT BusinessEntityID,
        LastName,
        TerritoryName,
        CountryRegionName
    FROM Sales.vSalesPerson
    WHERE TerritoryName IS NOT NULL
    ORDER BY CASE CountryRegionName
            WHEN 'United States' THEN TerritoryName
            ELSE CountryRegionName
    

    D. Use CASE in an UPDATE statement

    The following example uses the CASE expression in an UPDATE statement to determine the value that is set for the column VacationHours for employees with SalariedFlag set to 0. When subtracting 10 hours from VacationHours results in a negative value, VacationHours is increased by 40 hours; otherwise, VacationHours is increased by 20 hours. The OUTPUT clause is used to display the before and after vacation values.

    USE AdventureWorks2019;
    UPDATE HumanResources.Employee
    SET VacationHours = (
                WHEN ((VacationHours - 10.00) < 0) THEN VacationHours + 40
                ELSE (VacationHours + 20.00)
    OUTPUT Deleted.BusinessEntityID,
        Deleted.VacationHours AS BeforeValue,
        Inserted.VacationHours AS AfterValue
    WHERE SalariedFlag = 0;
    

    E. Use CASE in a SET statement

    The following example uses the CASE expression in a SET statement in the table-valued function dbo.GetContactInfo. In the AdventureWorks2019 database, all data related to people is stored in the Person.Person table. For example, the person may be an employee, vendor representative, or a customer. The function returns the first and last name of a given BusinessEntityID and the contact type for that person. The CASE expression in the SET statement determines the value to display for the column ContactType based on the existence of the BusinessEntityID column in the Employee, Vendor, or Customer tables.

    USE AdventureWorks2019;
    CREATE FUNCTION dbo.GetContactInformation (@BusinessEntityID INT)
    RETURNS @retContactInformation TABLE (
        BusinessEntityID INT NOT NULL,
        FirstName NVARCHAR(50) NULL,
        LastName NVARCHAR(50) NULL,
        ContactType NVARCHAR(50) NULL,
        PRIMARY KEY CLUSTERED (BusinessEntityID ASC)
    -- Returns the first name, last name and contact type for the specified contact.
    BEGIN
        DECLARE @FirstName NVARCHAR(50),
            @LastName NVARCHAR(50),
            @ContactType NVARCHAR(50);
        -- Get common contact information
        SELECT @BusinessEntityID = BusinessEntityID,
            @FirstName = FirstName,
            @LastName = LastName
        FROM Person.Person
        WHERE BusinessEntityID = @BusinessEntityID;
        SET @ContactType = CASE
                -- Check for employee
                WHEN EXISTS (
                        SELECT *
                        FROM HumanResources.Employee AS e
                        WHERE e.BusinessEntityID = @BusinessEntityID
                    THEN 'Employee'
                        -- Check for vendor
                WHEN EXISTS (
                        SELECT *
                        FROM Person.BusinessEntityContact AS bec
                        WHERE bec.BusinessEntityID = @BusinessEntityID
                    THEN 'Vendor'
                        -- Check for store
                WHEN EXISTS (
                        SELECT *
                        FROM Purchasing.Vendor AS v
                        WHERE v.BusinessEntityID = @BusinessEntityID
                    THEN 'Store Contact'
                        -- Check for individual consumer
                WHEN EXISTS (
                        SELECT *
                        FROM Sales.Customer AS c
                        WHERE c.PersonID = @BusinessEntityID
                    THEN 'Consumer'
        -- Return the information to the caller
        IF @BusinessEntityID IS NOT NULL
        BEGIN
            INSERT @retContactInformation
            SELECT @BusinessEntityID,
                @FirstName,
                @LastName,
                @ContactType;
        RETURN;
    SELECT BusinessEntityID,
        FirstName,
        LastName,
        ContactType
    FROM dbo.GetContactInformation(2200);
    SELECT BusinessEntityID,
        FirstName,
        LastName,
        ContactType
    FROM dbo.GetContactInformation(5);
    

    F. Use CASE in a HAVING clause

    The following example uses the CASE expression in a HAVING clause to restrict the rows returned by the SELECT statement. The statement returns the hourly rate for each job title in the HumanResources.Employee table. The HAVING clause restricts the titles to those that are held by salaried employees with a maximum pay rate greater than 40 dollars, or non-salaried employees with a maximum pay rate greater than 15 dollars.

    USE AdventureWorks2019;
    SELECT JobTitle,
        MAX(ph1.Rate) AS MaximumRate
    FROM HumanResources.Employee AS e
    INNER JOIN HumanResources.EmployeePayHistory AS ph1
        ON e.BusinessEntityID = ph1.BusinessEntityID
    GROUP BY JobTitle
    HAVING (
            MAX(CASE
                    WHEN SalariedFlag = 1 THEN ph1.Rate
                    ELSE NULL
                    END) > 40.00
            OR MAX(CASE
                    WHEN SalariedFlag = 0 THEN ph1.Rate
                    ELSE NULL
                    END) > 15.00
    ORDER BY MaximumRate DESC;
    

    Examples: Azure Synapse Analytics and Analytics Platform System (PDW)

    G. Use a SELECT statement with a CASE expression

    Within a SELECT statement, the CASE expression allows for values to be replaced in the result set based on comparison values. The following example uses the CASE expression to change the display of product line categories to make them more understandable. When a value doesn't exist, the text "Not for sale' is displayed.

    -- Uses AdventureWorks
    SELECT ProductAlternateKey,
        Category = CASE ProductLine
            WHEN 'R' THEN 'Road'
            WHEN 'M' THEN 'Mountain'
            WHEN 'T' THEN 'Touring'
            WHEN 'S' THEN 'Other sale items'
            ELSE 'Not for sale'
        EnglishProductName
    FROM dbo.DimProduct
    ORDER BY ProductKey;
    

    H. Use CASE in an UPDATE statement

    The following example uses the CASE expression in an UPDATE statement to determine the value that is set for the column VacationHours for employees with SalariedFlag set to 0. When subtracting 10 hours from VacationHours results in a negative value, VacationHours is increased by 40 hours; otherwise, VacationHours is increased by 20 hours.

    -- Uses AdventureWorks
    UPDATE dbo.DimEmployee
    SET VacationHours = (
                WHEN ((VacationHours - 10.00) < 0) THEN VacationHours + 40
                ELSE (VacationHours + 20.00)
    WHERE SalariedFlag = 0;
    

    See also

  • Expressions (Transact-SQL)
  • SELECT (Transact-SQL)
  • COALESCE (Transact-SQL)
  • IIF (Transact-SQL)
  • CHOOSE (Transact-SQL)
  •