Conditional Expressions (XQuery)
XQuery supports the following conditional if-then-else statement:
if (<expression1>)
then
<expression2>
else
<expression3>
Depending on the effective Boolean value of expression1, either expression2 or expression3 is evaluated. For example:
If the test expression, expression1, results in an empty sequence, the result is False.
If the test expression, expression1, results in a simple Boolean value, this value is the result of the expression.
If the test expression, expression1, results in a sequence of one or more nodes, the result of the expression is True.
Otherwise, a static error is raised.
Also note the following:
The test expression must be enclosed between parentheses.
The else expression is required. If you do not need it, you can return " ( ) ", as illustrated in the examples in this topic.
For example, the following query is specified against the xml type variable. The if condition tests the value of the SQL variable (@v) inside the XQuery expression by using the sql:variable() function extension function. If the variable value is "FirstName", it returns the <FirstName> element. Otherwise, it returns the <LastName> element.
declare @x xml
declare @v varchar(20)
set @v='FirstName'
set @x='
<ROOT rootID="2">
<FirstName>fname</FirstName>
<LastName>lname</LastName>
</ROOT>'
SELECT @x.query('
if ( sql:variable("@v")="FirstName" ) then
/ROOT/FirstName
else
/ROOT/LastName
')
This is the result:
<FirstName>fname</FirstName>
The following query retrieves the first two feature descriptions from the product catalog description of a specific product model. If there are more features in the document, it adds a <there-is-more> element with empty content.
SELECT CatalogDescription.query('
declare namespace p1="https://schemas.microsoft.com/sqlserver/2004/07/adventure-works/ProductModelDescription";
<Product>
{ /p1:ProductDescription/@ProductModelID }
{ /p1:ProductDescription/@ProductModelName }
{
for $f in /p1:ProductDescription/p1:Features/*[position()<=2]
return
$f
}
{
if (count(/p1:ProductDescription/p1:Features/*) > 2)
then <there-is-more/>
else ()
}
</Product>
') as x
FROM Production.ProductModel
WHERE ProductModelID = 19
In the previous query, the condition in the if expression checks whether there are more than two child elements in <Features>. If yes, it returns the <there-is-more/> element in the result.
This is the result:
<Product ProductModelID="19" ProductModelName="Mountain 100">
<p1:Warranty xmlns:p1="https://schemas.microsoft.com/sqlserver/2004/07/adventure-works/ProductModelWarrAndMain">
<p1:WarrantyPeriod>3 years</p1:WarrantyPeriod>
<p1:Description>parts and labor</p1:Description>
</p1:Warranty>
<p2:Maintenance xmlns:p2="https://schemas.microsoft.com/sqlserver/2004/07/adventure-works/ProductModelWarrAndMain">
<p2:NoOfYears>10 years</p2:NoOfYears>
<p2:Description>maintenance contract available through your dealer or any Adventure Works Cycles retail store.</p2:Description>
</p2:Maintenance>
<there-is-more />
</Product>
In the following query, a <Location> element with a LocationID attribute is returned if the work center location does not specify the setup hours.
SELECT Instructions.query('
declare namespace AWMI="https://schemas.microsoft.com/sqlserver/2004/07/adventure-works/ProductModelManuInstructions";
for $WC in //AWMI:root/AWMI:Location
return
if ( $WC[not(@SetupHours)] )
then
<WorkCenterLocation>
{ $WC/@LocationID }
</WorkCenterLocation>
else
()
') as Result
FROM Production.ProductModel
where ProductModelID=7
This is the result:
<WorkCenterLocation LocationID="30" />
<WorkCenterLocation LocationID="45" />
<WorkCenterLocation LocationID="60" />
This query can be written without the if clause, as shown in the following example:
SELECT Instructions.query('
declare namespace AWMI="https://schemas.microsoft.com/sqlserver/2004/07/adventure-works/ProductModelManuInstructions";
for $WC in //AWMI:root/AWMI:Location[not(@SetupHours)]
return
<Location>
{ $WC/@LocationID }
</Location>
') as Result
FROM Production.ProductModel
where ProductModelID=7