In a stored procedure (Oracle in my case), I want to add some values to an existing record. Problem is that both the existing value and the value to be added can be null. I only want the result to be NULL when both operands are null. If only one of them is null, I want the result to be the other operand. If both are non-null, I want the result to be "normal" addition.
Here's what I am using so far:
SELECT column INTO anz_old FROM aTable Where <someKeyCondition>;
IF anz_old IS NULL
THEN
anz_new := panzahl;
ELSE
anz_new := anz_new + NVL (panzahl, 0);
END IF;
UPATE aTabel set column = anz_new Where <someKeyCondition>;
Is there a more elegant way (pereferably completely in SQL, i.e. just in an update statement short of a long CASE-Statement with basically the same logic as the above code)?
If you want to add a and b and either may be null, you could use coalesce, which returns the first non-null parameter you pass it:
coalesce(a+b, a, b)
So in this case, if neither parameter is null, it will return the sum. If only b is null, it will skip a+b and return a. If a is null, it will skip a+b and a and return b, which will only be null if they are both null.
If you want the answer to be 0 rather than null if both a and b are null, you can pass 0 as the last parameter:
coalesce(a+b, a, b, 0)
Do consider @erwins answer - null
might not be the right thing to be using.