106

I'd like to write a SELECT statement that uses just one test to return columns with no value (null, empty, or all spaces).

I thought this would work:

SELECT column_name from table_name WHERE column_name NOT LIKE '%_%';

But this does not work for NULL values.

Of course I can add

OR column_name IS NULL

and it will work, but I'd like a way that uses a single test.

OMG Ponies
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John Gordon
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    Related: http://stackoverflow.com/questions/4042496/how-should-i-deal-with-null-parameters-in-a-pl-sql-stored-procedure-when-i-want-t/4042572#4042572 – OMG Ponies Nov 05 '10 at 19:57
  • Is it not desirable to have multiple tests? i.e. more granularity = better feedback to users about how to correct data. – onedaywhen Nov 08 '10 at 09:15
  • @onedaywhen: In general it may be better to have more granularity, but I'm working with an existing code base and I want to to mimic the existing code structure as closely as possible. The current code does only one test, so I was looking for a solution that also had only one test. – John Gordon Nov 10 '10 at 17:36

12 Answers12

115

Functionally, you should be able to use

SELECT column_name
  FROM table_name
 WHERE TRIM(column_name) IS NULL

The problem there is that an index on COLUMN_NAME would not be used. You would need to have a function-based index on TRIM(column_name) if that is a selective condition.

Justin Cave
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30
SELECT column_name from table_name
WHERE RTRIM(ISNULL(column_name, '')) LIKE ''

ISNULL(column_name, '') will return '' if column_name is NULL, otherwise it will return column_name.

UPDATE

In Oracle, you can use NVL to achieve the same results.

SELECT column_name from table_name
WHERE RTRIM(NVL(column_name, '')) LIKE ''
GendoIkari
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20

The NULLIF function will convert any column value with only whitespace into a NULL value. Works for T-SQL and SQL Server 2008 & up.

SELECT [column_name]
FROM [table_name]
WHERE NULLIF([column_name], '') IS NULL
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    A good answer would contain an explanation of the code, and why it was written this way. I recommend you update your answer :-) – Qirel Feb 05 '16 at 16:52
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    Whats the point of this? It would be more efficient to just set it to [column_name] LIKE '' – SILENT Dec 26 '16 at 23:09
  • It needs TRIM to support multiple white spaces – Michael Freidgeim Jan 29 '20 at 06:16
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    Testing on SQL Server 2017, this does work for multiple white spaces without TRIM. It doesn't make sense to me, because according the documentation NULLIF should return NULL only if the two expressions are equal, and a string of spaces does not usually equal an empty string. (I only tested for spaces, not tabs, newlines, or other whitespace characters.) – Jovie Jul 17 '20 at 14:48
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    @Jovie SQL Server sometimes ignores trailing whitespace, read: https://stackoverflow.com/questions/17876478/why-the-sql-server-ignore-the-empty-space-at-the-end-automatically – Brian MacKay Nov 11 '20 at 20:45
  • And this is much more faster than trim :) – Avinash Reddy May 31 '21 at 02:01
9

While checking null or Empty value for a column, I noticed that there are some support concerns in various Databases.

Every Database doesn't support TRIM method.

Below is the matrix just to understand the supported methods by different databases.

The TRIM function in SQL is used to remove specified prefix or suffix from a string. The most common pattern being removed is white spaces. This function is called differently in different databases:

  • MySQL: TRIM(), RTRIM(), LTRIM()
  • Oracle: RTRIM(), LTRIM()
  • SQL Server: TRIM(), RTRIM(), LTRIM()

How to Check Empty/Null/Whitespace :-

Below are two different ways according to different Databases-

The syntax for these trim functions are:

  1. Use of Trim to check-

    SELECT FirstName FROM UserDetails WHERE TRIM(LastName) IS NULL

  2. Use of LTRIM & RTRIM to check-

    SELECT FirstName FROM UserDetails WHERE LTRIM(RTRIM(LastName)) IS NULL

Above both ways provide same result just use based on your DataBase support. It Just returns the FirstName from UserDetails table if it has an empty LastName

Hoping this will help others too :)

bvwidt
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Vikash Pandey
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  • WITH t as ( select ' ' c union all select '' c union all select NULL) SELECT * FROM t WHERE LTRIM(RTRIM(c)) IS NULL; didn't returned 3 records on SQL server – Waqar Nov 29 '16 at 12:16
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    Why would both L & RTRIM be needed? Wouldn't only one of the functions suffice to check if column is empty? – SILENT Dec 26 '16 at 23:08
6

This phpMyAdmin query is returning those rows, that are NOT null or empty or just whitespaces:

SELECT * FROM `table_name` WHERE NOT ((`column_name` IS NULL) OR (TRIM(`column_name`) LIKE ''))

if you want to select rows that are null/empty/just whitespaces just remove NOT.

Chose
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3

Use below query and it works

SELECT column_name FROM table_name where isnull(column_name,'') <> ''
1

Although @MerrickPlainview answer seems close and small, the full answer (to also deal with white space as the OP asked for) would be this:

SELECT column_name FROM table_name WHERE NULLIF(TRIM(column_name), '') IS NOT NULL
Grandizer
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0

What I use for IsNotNullOrEmptyOrWhiteSpace in T-SQL is:

SELECT [column_name] FROM [table_name]
WHERE LEN(RTRIM(ISNULL([column_name], ''))) > 0
TiltonJH
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0

Every single persons suggestion to run a query in Oracle to find records whose specific field is just blank, (this is not including (null) or any other field just a blank line) did not work. I tried every single suggested code. Guess I will keep searching online.

*****UPDATE*****

I tried this and it worked, not sure why it would not work if < 1 but for some reason < 2 worked and only returned records whose field is just blank

select [columnName] from [tableName] where LENGTH(columnName) < 2 ;

I am guessing whatever script that was used to convert data over has left something in the field even though it shows blank, that is my guess anyways as to why the < 2 works but not < 1

However, if you have any other values in that column field that is less than two characters then you might have to come up with another solution. If there are not a lot of other characters then you can single them out.

Hope my solution helps someone else out there some day.

CatWoman
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0

You can also check this. This works for me, when you want to fetch both null value and another condition (i.e) my query should return the rows where columnname should be null and should have the word 'questiontext'.

SELECT * 
FROM `table_name` 
WHERE (('columnname' IS NULL) OR (TRIM('columnname') LIKE 'questiontext'))

Here, my 'columnname' should be equal to 'questiontext'.

Slava Rozhnev
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Sowmiya
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-3

As in Oracle you can use NVL function in MySQL you can use IFNULL(columnaName, newValue) to achieve your desired result as in this example

SELECT column_name from table_name WHERE IFNULL(column_name,'') NOT LIKE '%_%';
-5

you can use

SELECT [column_name] 
FROM [table_name]
WHERE [column_name] LIKE '% %' 
OR [column_name] IS NULL
gong15A
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