为什么 NULL = NULL 在 SQL Server 中评估为 false
In SQL server if you have nullParam=NULL
in a where clause, it always evaluates to false. This is counterintuitive and has caused me many errors. I do understand the IS NULL
and IS NOT NULL
keywords are the correct way to do it. But why does SQL server behave this way?
Think of the null as "unknown" in that case (or "does not exist"). In either of those cases, you can't say that they are equal, because you don't know the value of either of them. So, null=null evaluates to not true (false or null, depending on your system), because you don't know the values to say that they ARE equal. This behavior is defined in the ANSI SQL-92 standard.
EDIT: This depends on your ansi_nulls setting. if you have ANSI_NULLS off, this WILL evaluate to true. Run the following code for an example...
set ansi_nulls off
if null = null
print 'true'
else
print 'false'
set ansi_nulls ON
if null = null
print 'true'
else
print 'false'
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