June 7, 2013 at 11:42 am
I have the following:
DECLARE BalanceDue money, ktr int
but I get a red underline under "money" and the message I get with I put the mouse over it or run the query is:
'money' is not a recognized CURSOR option.
?????
Why is that?
I change it to varchar and it works fine.
Thanks,
Tom
June 7, 2013 at 11:44 am
Aren't you missing the @ on your variable declaration?
DECLARE @BalanceDue money, @ktr int
June 7, 2013 at 11:46 am
I had just realized that after I posted it and was just going to respond to it.
Little brain fade there.
Thanks,
Tom
June 7, 2013 at 1:32 pm
Be very careful about using the money datatype. Given your variable names it sounds like you might be doing some calculations? The money datatype is NOT accurate when doing calculations. It has serious rounding errors.
declare @mon1 money,
@mon2 money,
@mon3 money,
@num1 numeric(19,4),
@num2 numeric(19,4),
@num3 numeric(19,4)
select @mon1 = 100, @mon2 = 339, @mon3 = 10000,
@num1 = 100, @num2 = 339, @num3 = 10000
select @mon1 / @mon2 * @mon3 as MoneyType,
@num1 / @num2 * @num3 as NumericType
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June 7, 2013 at 1:50 pm
Good point.
MoneyTypeNumericType
2949.002949.852507
Thanks,
Tom
June 10, 2013 at 5:26 am
Sean Lange (6/7/2013)
Be very careful about using the money datatype. Given your variable names it sounds like you might be doing some calculations? The money datatype is NOT accurate when doing calculations. It has serious rounding errors.
declare @mon1 money,
@mon2 money,
@mon3 money,
@num1 numeric(19,4),
@num2 numeric(19,4),
@num3 numeric(19,4)
select @mon1 = 100, @mon2 = 339, @mon3 = 10000,
@num1 = 100, @num2 = 339, @num3 = 10000
select @mon1 / @mon2 * @mon3 as MoneyType,
@num1 / @num2 * @num3 as NumericType
+1 🙂
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