EXCEPT
treats NULL
values as matching.
This query:
WITH q (value) AS
(
SELECT NULL
UNION ALL
SELECT 1
),
p (value) AS
(
SELECT NULL
UNION ALL
SELECT 2
)
SELECT *
FROM q
WHERE value NOT IN
(
SELECT value
FROM p
)
will return an empty rowset.
This query:
WITH q (value) AS
(
SELECT NULL
UNION ALL
SELECT 1
),
p (value) AS
(
SELECT NULL
UNION ALL
SELECT 2
)
SELECT *
FROM q
WHERE NOT EXISTS
(
SELECT NULL
FROM p
WHERE p.value = q.value
)
will return
NULL
1
, and this one:
WITH q (value) AS
(
SELECT NULL
UNION ALL
SELECT 1
),
p (value) AS
(
SELECT NULL
UNION ALL
SELECT 2
)
SELECT *
FROM q
EXCEPT
SELECT *
FROM p
will return:
1
Recursive reference is also allowed in EXCEPT
clause in a recursive CTE
, though it behaves in a strange way: it returns everything except the last row of a previous set, not everything except the whole previous set:
WITH q (value) AS
(
SELECT 1
UNION ALL
SELECT 2
UNION ALL
SELECT 3
),
rec (value) AS
(
SELECT value
FROM q
UNION ALL
SELECT *
FROM (
SELECT value
FROM q
EXCEPT
SELECT value
FROM rec
) q2
)
SELECT TOP 10 *
FROM rec
---
1
2
3
-- original set
1
2
-- everything except the last row of the previous set, that is 3
1
3
-- everything except the last row of the previous set, that is 2
1
2
-- everything except the last row of the previous set, that is 3, etc.
1
SQL Server
developers must just have forgotten to forbid it.
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