PostgreSQL, in addition to generalized case statements, includes the
nullif
function. The docs describe it as a way "to perform the inversation operation
of a coalesce
".
Rather than resolving to some fallback value if the primary value is null
(like coalesce
does), it will resolve to null
if the given values are the
same.
> select nullif(0, 0);
nullif
--------
ø
(1 row)
If the values are not equal, then the first value is the result of the function.
> select nullif(1, 0);
nullif
--------
1
(1 row)
One way this can be used is in conjunction with the coalesce
function. For
instance, if I have a table of values that are either 0 or a positive number, I
can coerce all the zeros to be 1
like so.
> select coalesce(nullif(0, 0), 1);
coalesce
----------
1
(1 row)
h/t Ian Jones