1# 2001 September 15 2# 3# The author disclaims copyright to this source code. In place of 4# a legal notice, here is a blessing: 5# 6# May you do good and not evil. 7# May you find forgiveness for yourself and forgive others. 8# May you share freely, never taking more than you give. 9# 10#*********************************************************************** 11# This file implements regression tests for SQLite library. 12# 13# This file implements tests for proper treatment of the special 14# value NULL. 15# 16 17set testdir [file dirname $argv0] 18source $testdir/tester.tcl 19 20# Create a table and some data to work with. 21# 22do_test null-1.0 { 23 execsql { 24 begin; 25 create table t1(a,b,c); 26 insert into t1 values(1,0,0); 27 insert into t1 values(2,0,1); 28 insert into t1 values(3,1,0); 29 insert into t1 values(4,1,1); 30 insert into t1 values(5,null,0); 31 insert into t1 values(6,null,1); 32 insert into t1 values(7,null,null); 33 commit; 34 select * from t1; 35 } 36} {1 0 0 2 0 1 3 1 0 4 1 1 5 {} 0 6 {} 1 7 {} {}} 37 38# Check for how arithmetic expressions handle NULL 39# 40do_test null-1.1 { 41 execsql { 42 select ifnull(a+b,99) from t1; 43 } 44} {1 2 4 5 99 99 99} 45do_test null-1.2 { 46 execsql { 47 select ifnull(b*c,99) from t1; 48 } 49} {0 0 0 1 99 99 99} 50 51# Check to see how the CASE expression handles NULL values. The 52# first WHEN for which the test expression is TRUE is selected. 53# FALSE and UNKNOWN test expressions are skipped. 54# 55do_test null-2.1 { 56 execsql { 57 select ifnull(case when b<>0 then 1 else 0 end, 99) from t1; 58 } 59} {0 0 1 1 0 0 0} 60do_test null-2.2 { 61 execsql { 62 select ifnull(case when not b<>0 then 1 else 0 end, 99) from t1; 63 } 64} {1 1 0 0 0 0 0} 65do_test null-2.3 { 66 execsql { 67 select ifnull(case when b<>0 and c<>0 then 1 else 0 end, 99) from t1; 68 } 69} {0 0 0 1 0 0 0} 70do_test null-2.4 { 71 execsql { 72 select ifnull(case when not (b<>0 and c<>0) then 1 else 0 end, 99) from t1; 73 } 74} {1 1 1 0 1 0 0} 75do_test null-2.5 { 76 execsql { 77 select ifnull(case when b<>0 or c<>0 then 1 else 0 end, 99) from t1; 78 } 79} {0 1 1 1 0 1 0} 80do_test null-2.6 { 81 execsql { 82 select ifnull(case when not (b<>0 or c<>0) then 1 else 0 end, 99) from t1; 83 } 84} {1 0 0 0 0 0 0} 85do_test null-2.7 { 86 execsql { 87 select ifnull(case b when c then 1 else 0 end, 99) from t1; 88 } 89} {1 0 0 1 0 0 0} 90do_test null-2.8 { 91 execsql { 92 select ifnull(case c when b then 1 else 0 end, 99) from t1; 93 } 94} {1 0 0 1 0 0 0} 95 96# Check to see that NULL values are ignored in aggregate functions. 97# 98do_test null-3.1 { 99 execsql { 100 select count(*), count(b), count(c), sum(b), sum(c), 101 avg(b), avg(c), min(b), max(b) from t1; 102 } 103} {7 4 6 2 3 0.5 0.5 0 1} 104 105# The sum of zero entries is a NULL, but the total of zero entries is 0. 106# 107do_test null-3.2 { 108 execsql { 109 SELECT sum(b), total(b) FROM t1 WHERE b<0 110 } 111} {{} 0.0} 112 113# Check to see how WHERE clauses handle NULL values. A NULL value 114# is the same as UNKNOWN. The WHERE clause should only select those 115# rows that are TRUE. FALSE and UNKNOWN rows are rejected. 116# 117do_test null-4.1 { 118 execsql { 119 select a from t1 where b<10 120 } 121} {1 2 3 4} 122do_test null-4.2 { 123 execsql { 124 select a from t1 where not b>10 125 } 126} {1 2 3 4} 127do_test null-4.3 { 128 execsql { 129 select a from t1 where b<10 or c=1; 130 } 131} {1 2 3 4 6} 132do_test null-4.4 { 133 execsql { 134 select a from t1 where b<10 and c=1; 135 } 136} {2 4} 137do_test null-4.5 { 138 execsql { 139 select a from t1 where not (b<10 and c=1); 140 } 141} {1 3 5} 142 143# The DISTINCT keyword on a SELECT statement should treat NULL values 144# as distinct 145# 146do_test null-5.1 { 147 execsql { 148 select distinct b from t1 order by b; 149 } 150} {{} 0 1} 151 152# A UNION to two queries should treat NULL values 153# as distinct. 154# 155# (Later:) We also take this opportunity to test the ability 156# of an ORDER BY clause to bind to either SELECT of a UNION. 157# The left-most SELECT is preferred. In standard SQL, only 158# the left SELECT can be used. The ability to match an ORDER 159# BY term to the right SELECT is an SQLite extension. 160# 161ifcapable compound { 162 do_test null-6.1 { 163 execsql { 164 select b from t1 union select c from t1 order by b; 165 } 166 } {{} 0 1} 167 do_test null-6.2 { 168 execsql { 169 select b from t1 union select c from t1 order by 1; 170 } 171 } {{} 0 1} 172 do_test null-6.3 { 173 execsql { 174 select b from t1 union select c from t1 order by t1.b; 175 } 176 } {{} 0 1} 177 do_test null-6.4 { 178 execsql { 179 select b from t1 union select c from t1 order by main.t1.b; 180 } 181 } {{} 0 1} 182 do_test null-6.5 { 183 catchsql { 184 select b from t1 union select c from t1 order by t1.a; 185 } 186 } {1 {1st ORDER BY term does not match any column in the result set}} 187 do_test null-6.6 { 188 catchsql { 189 select b from t1 union select c from t1 order by main.t1.a; 190 } 191 } {1 {1st ORDER BY term does not match any column in the result set}} 192} ;# ifcapable compound 193 194# The UNIQUE constraint only applies to non-null values 195# 196ifcapable conflict { 197do_test null-7.1 { 198 execsql { 199 create table t2(a, b unique on conflict ignore); 200 insert into t2 values(1,1); 201 insert into t2 values(2,null); 202 insert into t2 values(3,null); 203 insert into t2 values(4,1); 204 select a from t2; 205 } 206 } {1 2 3} 207 do_test null-7.2 { 208 execsql { 209 create table t3(a, b, c, unique(b,c) on conflict ignore); 210 insert into t3 values(1,1,1); 211 insert into t3 values(2,null,1); 212 insert into t3 values(3,null,1); 213 insert into t3 values(4,1,1); 214 select a from t3; 215 } 216 } {1 2 3} 217} 218 219# Ticket #461 - Make sure nulls are handled correctly when doing a 220# lookup using an index. 221# 222do_test null-8.1 { 223 execsql { 224 CREATE TABLE t4(x,y); 225 INSERT INTO t4 VALUES(1,11); 226 INSERT INTO t4 VALUES(2,NULL); 227 SELECT x FROM t4 WHERE y=NULL; 228 } 229} {} 230ifcapable subquery { 231 do_test null-8.2 { 232 execsql { 233 SELECT x FROM t4 WHERE y IN (33,NULL); 234 } 235 } {} 236} 237do_test null-8.3 { 238 execsql { 239 SELECT x FROM t4 WHERE y<33 ORDER BY x; 240 } 241} {1} 242do_test null-8.4 { 243 execsql { 244 SELECT x FROM t4 WHERE y>6 ORDER BY x; 245 } 246} {1} 247do_test null-8.5 { 248 execsql { 249 SELECT x FROM t4 WHERE y!=33 ORDER BY x; 250 } 251} {1} 252do_test null-8.11 { 253 execsql { 254 CREATE INDEX t4i1 ON t4(y); 255 SELECT x FROM t4 WHERE y=NULL; 256 } 257} {} 258ifcapable subquery { 259 do_test null-8.12 { 260 execsql { 261 SELECT x FROM t4 WHERE y IN (33,NULL); 262 } 263 } {} 264} 265do_test null-8.13 { 266 execsql { 267 SELECT x FROM t4 WHERE y<33 ORDER BY x; 268 } 269} {1} 270do_test null-8.14 { 271 execsql { 272 SELECT x FROM t4 WHERE y>6 ORDER BY x; 273 } 274} {1} 275do_test null-8.15 { 276 execsql { 277 SELECT x FROM t4 WHERE y!=33 ORDER BY x; 278 } 279} {1} 280 281do_execsql_test null-9.1 { 282 CREATE TABLE t5(a, b, c); 283 CREATE UNIQUE INDEX t5ab ON t5(a, b); 284 285 INSERT INTO t5 VALUES(1, NULL, 'one'); 286 INSERT INTO t5 VALUES(1, NULL, 'i'); 287 INSERT INTO t5 VALUES(NULL, 'x', 'two'); 288 INSERT INTO t5 VALUES(NULL, 'x', 'ii'); 289} 290 291do_execsql_test null-9.2 { 292 SELECT * FROM t5 WHERE a = 1 AND b IS NULL; 293} {1 {} one 1 {} i} 294 295do_execsql_test null-9.3 { 296 SELECT * FROM t5 WHERE a IS NULL AND b = 'x'; 297} {{} x two {} x ii} 298 299# 2020-09-30 ticket 5c4e7aa793943803 300reset_db 301do_execsql_test null-10.1 { 302 CREATE TABLE t0(c0 PRIMARY KEY DESC); 303 INSERT INTO t0(c0) VALUES (0); 304 SELECT * FROM t0 WHERE t0.c0 > NULL; 305} {} 306 307finish_test 308