问题
I have a SQL Server database.
One field has values which are like
ID VALUE
1 NEGATIF
2 11.4
3 0.2
4 A RH(+)
5 -----
6 >>>>>
7 5.6<
8 -13.9
I want to CONVERT VALUE field to decimal, of course convert-able fields.
What kind of SQL statement can do this?
How can I understand which value is raising error while converting?
PS: I think this can solve WHERE VALUE LIKE '[a-z]'
but how can I add more filter like [-+ ()] ?
回答1:
Plain ISNUMERIC is rubbish
- Empty string,
+
,-
and. are all valid
- So is
+.
etc 1e-3
is valid for float but not decimal (unless you CAST to float then to decimal)
For a particularly cryptic but failsafe solution, append e0
or .0e0
then use ISNUMERIC
SELECT
ISNUMERIC(MyCOl + 'e0') --decimal check,
ISNUMERIC(MyCOl + '.0e0') --integer check
So
SELECT
ID, VALUE,
CAST(
CASE WHEN ISNUMERIC(VALUE + 'e0') = 1 THEN VALUE ELSE NULL END
AS decimal(38, 10)
) AS ConvertedVALUE
FROM
Mytable
来源:https://stackoverflow.com/questions/4522056/how-to-determine-the-field-value-which-can-not-convert-to-decimal-float-int-i