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MySQL - CASE Statement
MySQL CASE Statement
The case statement in MySQL is used to test a value for equality against a list of values/conditions.
Syntax
Following is the syntax of the CASE statement −
CASE value WHEN [compare_value] THEN result [WHEN [compare_value] THEN result ...] [ELSE result] END CASE Or, CASE WHEN [condition] THEN result [WHEN [condition] THEN result ...] [ELSE result] END CASE
Example
Following query demonstrates the usage of the MySQL CASE statement in a procedure −
DELIMITER // CREATE PROCEDURE case_example(IN degree VARCHAR(20), OUT full_form Varchar(50)) BEGIN CASE degree WHEN 'B-Tech' THEN SET full_form = 'Bachelor of Technology'; WHEN 'M-Tech' THEN SET full_form = 'Master of Technology'; WHEN 'BSC' THEN SET full_form = 'Bachelor of Science'; WHEN 'MSC' THEN SET full_form = 'Master of Science'; ELSE SET full_form = 'Irrelevant'; END CASE ; END // DELIMITER ;
You can call the above procedure using various input values as follows −
DELIMITER ; CALL case_example ('B-Tech', @test); SELECT @test;
Output
Following is the output of the above query −
@test |
---|
Bachelor of Technology |
Let's call the above procedure by using different input value as follows −
CALL case_example ('M-Tech', @test); SELECT @test;
Output
The above query produces the following output −
@test |
---|
Master of Technology |
In the following query, we have passed different input values to call the above procedure −
CALL case_example ('BSC', @test); SELECT @test;
Output
The above mysql query generates the following output −
@test |
---|
Bachelor of Science |
Let's call the above created procedure using the different input values shown below −
CALL case_example ('MSC', @test); SELECT @test;
Output
Following is the output of the above query −
@test |
---|
Master of Science |
The CASE Operator
MySQL also have a CASE operator which is similar to the CASE statement the only difference is that the ELSE NULL clause is not allowed in the CASE statement and it is terminated by END CASE. Whereas, the operator is terminated by END.
Example
Assume we have created a table named student_info as follows −
CREATE TABLE student_info (ID INT, NAME VARCHAR(25), SAL INT, EDUCATION VARCHAR(25));
Now, let's insert some records into the student_info table −
INSERT INTO student_info VALUES (101, 'Raju', 2254, 'B-Tech'), (101, 'Raju', 2254, 'M-Tech'), (101, 'Raju', 2254, 'BSC'), (101, 'Raju', 2254, 'MSC');
If you verify the contents of the EMP table you can observe its contents as −
select * from student_info;
Output
The above query generates the following output −
ID | NAME | SAL | EDUCATION |
---|---|---|---|
101 | Raju | 2254 | B-Tech |
101 | Raju | 2254 | M-Tech |
101 | Raju | 2254 | BSC |
101 | Raju | 2254 | MSC |
Following query displays the contents of the above table along with the full forms of the degrees using the CASE Operator −
SELECT ID, NAME, SAL, EDUCATION, CASE EDUCATION WHEN 'B-Tech' THEN 'Bachelor of Technology' WHEN 'M-Tech' THEN 'Master of Technology' WHEN 'BSC' THEN 'Bachelor of Science' WHEN 'MSC' THEN 'Master of Science' ELSE 'Irrelevant' END AS FullFORM FROM student_info;
Output
This will produce the following result −
ID | NAME | SAL | EDUCATION | FullForm |
---|---|---|---|---|
101 | Raju | 2254 | B - Tech | Bachelor of Technology |
101 | Raju | 2254 | M - Tech | Master of Technology |
101 | Raju | 2254 | BSC | Bachelor of Science |
101 | Raju | 2254 | MSC | Master of Science |