December 3, 2012 at 4:51 pm
Hi all, I have a formula that works fine in Excel but not in SQL. Hopefully someone knows of some gotcha that I am not in this situation.
When I run this in SQL I get 0.00 as a result but when I run it in Excel I get the expected value of 4020.73~
select ((26.7*((504.682+14.566)/14.73)*(520/(460+64))*(1/POWER((1/(0.99877-(0.00000072531*504.682*64)+(0.00013027*504.682))),2)))+(19.5*((1751.84+14.566)/14.73)*(520/(460+67))*(1/POWER((1/(0.99877-(0.00000072531*1751.84*67)+(0.00013027*1751.84))),2))))
QuickMath also had no problem understanding the formula (after switch the power() function to the ^notation
http://bit.ly/Tyx3po (might get a warning about XSS but its safe)
Is anyone aware of subtle differences in how SQL evaluates expressions compared to Excel?
thanks
Dave
Trainmark.com IT Training B2B Marketplace
(Jobs for IT Instructors)
December 3, 2012 at 5:09 pm
This might be what you are looking for:
Check out Brandie Tarvin blog posting at:
Let’s start with precedence. 2 + 3 = 5. And 2 + 3 – 4 will always equal 1. Precedence in math and SQL is identified by the use of parenthesis. Everything is operated on from the inside heading to the outside. So we have two possible formulas: (2 + 3) – 4 or 2 + (3 – 4).
Here’s the difference
We start with (2 + 3) – 4 and work the parens first. The formula becomes (5) – 4. Then 5 – 4 = 1.
We start with 2 + (3 – 4) and work the parens first. The formula becomes 2 + (-1) where the addition gets changed to a minus due to the presence of a negative number. So now we have 2 – 1 (which is the same as 2 + -1) = 1.
Precedence becomes really important in cases of the division and multiplication operands: * or /. So when we have a formula like 2 + 3 * 4, our two possibilities are either (2 + 3) * 4 or 2 + (3 * 4). Now we have 2 possible answers, that of 20 or that of 14.
(2 + 3) * 4 becomes (5) * 4 becomes 20.
2 + (3 * 4) becomes 2 + (12) becomes 14.
December 3, 2012 at 5:09 pm
Just made everything at least 3 decimals. I think some of the integer math was dropping the decimals for you.
select ((26.700*((504.682+14.566)/14.730)*(520.000/(460.000+64.000))*(1.00/POWER((1.00/(0.99877-(0.00000072531*504.682*64.000)+(0.00013027*504.682))),2.000)))+(19.500*((1751.84+14.566)/14.73)*(520.000/(460.000+67.000))*(1.000/POWER((1.000/(0.99877-(0.00000072531*1751.84*67.000)+(0.00013027*1751.84))),2.000))))
gives me: 4020.733146
December 3, 2012 at 5:23 pm
Thank you Mr. Webb! That did it all right. So glad I posted here I would have never tried that 🙂
Now that the nature of the issue is resolved I can play around with the best way to fix this in the production system.
Thanks again!
Dave
Trainmark.com IT Training B2B Marketplace
(Jobs for IT Instructors)
December 4, 2012 at 2:59 am
chisholmd (12/3/2012)
Hi all, I have a formula that works fine in Excel but not in SQL. Hopefully someone knows of some gotcha that I am not in this situation.When I run this in SQL I get 0.00 as a result but when I run it in Excel I get the expected value of 4020.73~
select ((26.7*((504.682+14.566)/14.73)*(520/(460+64))*(1/POWER((1/(0.99877-(0.00000072531*504.682*64)+(0.00013027*504.682))),2)))+(19.5*((1751.84+14.566)/14.73)*(520/(460+67))*(1/POWER((1/(0.99877-(0.00000072531*1751.84*67)+(0.00013027*1751.84))),2))))
Is anyone aware of subtle differences in how SQL evaluates expressions compared to Excel?
Within that complex expression are multiplications by the result of the following two computations:
SELECT (520 / (460 + 64))
SELECT (520 / (460 + 67))
Where both arguments to the division operator are integers, SQL Server performs integer division, returning zero in both cases. See http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/ms175009.aspx
Paul White
SQLPerformance.com
SQLkiwi blog
@SQL_Kiwi
December 4, 2012 at 7:41 am
For Information purposes only, copy/pasted your SQL and then added FROM dual;
at the end to run it in Oracle and got the right answer without any further manipulations:
4020.73315
(running Oracle Database 10g Enterprise Edition Release 10.2.0.5.0 - 64bit)
B
December 4, 2012 at 7:59 am
bleroy (12/4/2012)
For Information purposes only, copy/pasted your SQL and then addedFROM dual;
at the end to run it in Oracle and got the right answer without any further manipulations:
4020.73315
(running Oracle Database 10g Enterprise Edition Release 10.2.0.5.0 - 64bit)
B
Yes, Oracle deals with integer division differently, so the result of integer division doesn't need to be an integer (e.g. the mathematically accurate way! :-P)
December 4, 2012 at 8:21 am
December 4, 2012 at 8:31 am
We should all switch to Oracle immediately!
LOL
Paul White - SQL Server MVP
😀 ... I certainly was not suggesting such a radical step! - but I'm stuck at work and only have Oracle at my disposal, so always delighted when I can try stuff that works in both!
December 4, 2012 at 8:31 am
SQL Kiwi (12/4/2012)
We should all switch to Oracle immediately!LOL
It would make answering questions on the forum easier. We could just patronisingly point everyone to the homepage for Oracle documentation in order to give ourselves more job security 🙂
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