552
votes

I want to write a query like this:

SELECT o.OrderId, MAX(o.NegotiatedPrice, o.SuggestedPrice)
FROM Order o

But this isn't how the MAX function works, right? It is an aggregate function so it expects a single parameter and then returns the MAX of all rows.

Does anyone know how to do it my way?

30
That's implemented in most other databases as the GREATEST function; SQLite emulates support by allowing multiple columns in the MAX aggregate. - OMG Ponies
When finding a solution for max(a, b) below keep in mind the question about whether you want the syntax or calculation for "a" and/or "b" to be repeated. I.e. if "b" is derived from a complex calculation involving lots of syntax then you may prefer a solution where "b" appears only once. E.g. the solution "IIF(a>b, a, b)" means repeating "b" – which might be syntactically ugly, however the following solution means "b" (and "a") appear only once: SELECT MAX(VALUE) FROM (SELECT a AS VALUE UNION SELECT b AS VALUE) AS T1 - Andrew Jens
Following up on OMG Ponies' good advice, in the DBMS I've been using, the function is GREATER, rather than GREATEST. So check the help for your DBMS, if you don't find one, try the other, or something similar. - Dan Konigsbach

30 Answers

177
votes

You'd need to make a User-Defined Function if you wanted to have syntax similar to your example, but could you do what you want to do, inline, fairly easily with a CASE statement, as the others have said.

The UDF could be something like this:

create function dbo.InlineMax(@val1 int, @val2 int)
returns int
as
begin
  if @val1 > @val2
    return @val1
  return isnull(@val2,@val1)
end

... and you would call it like so ...

SELECT o.OrderId, dbo.InlineMax(o.NegotiatedPrice, o.SuggestedPrice) 
FROM Order o
520
votes

If you're using SQL Server 2008 (or above), then this is the better solution:

SELECT o.OrderId,
       (SELECT MAX(Price)
        FROM (VALUES (o.NegotiatedPrice),(o.SuggestedPrice)) AS AllPrices(Price))
FROM Order o

All credit and votes should go to Sven's answer to a related question, "SQL MAX of multiple columns?"
I say it's the "best answer" because:

  1. It doesn't require complicating your code with UNION's, PIVOT's, UNPIVOT's, UDF's, and crazy-long CASE statments.
  2. It isn't plagued with the problem of handling nulls, it handles them just fine.
  3. It's easy to swap out the "MAX" with "MIN", "AVG", or "SUM". You can use any aggregate function to find the aggregate over many different columns.
  4. You're not limited to the names I used (i.e. "AllPrices" and "Price"). You can pick your own names to make it easier to read and understand for the next guy.
  5. You can find multiple aggregates using SQL Server 2008's derived_tables like so:
    SELECT MAX(a), MAX(b) FROM (VALUES (1, 2), (3, 4), (5, 6), (7, 8), (9, 10) ) AS MyTable(a, b)
241
votes

Can be done in one line:

-- the following expression calculates ==> max(@val1, @val2)
SELECT 0.5 * ((@val1 + @val2) + ABS(@val1 - @val2)) 

Edit: If you're dealing with very large numbers you'll have to convert the value variables into bigint in order to avoid an integer overflow.

133
votes

I don't think so. I wanted this the other day. The closest I got was:

SELECT
  o.OrderId,
  CASE WHEN o.NegotiatedPrice > o.SuggestedPrice THEN o.NegotiatedPrice 
     ELSE o.SuggestedPrice
  END
FROM Order o
104
votes

Why not try IIF function (requires SQL Server 2012 and later)

IIF(a>b, a, b)

That's it.

(Hint: be careful about either would be null, since the result of a>b will be false whenever either is null. So b will be the result in this case)

33
votes
DECLARE @MAX INT
@MAX = (SELECT MAX(VALUE) 
               FROM (SELECT 1 AS VALUE UNION 
                     SELECT 2 AS VALUE) AS T1)
18
votes

In SQL Server 2012 or higher, you can use a combination of IIF and ISNULL (or COALESCE) to get the maximum of 2 values.
Even when 1 of them is NULL.

IIF(col1 >= col2, col1, ISNULL(col2, col1)) 

Or if you want it to return 0 when both are NULL

IIF(col1 >= col2, col1, COALESCE(col2, col1, 0)) 

Example snippet:

-- use table variable for testing purposes
declare @Order table 
(
  OrderId int primary key identity(1,1),
  NegotiatedPrice decimal(10,2),
  SuggestedPrice decimal(10,2)
);

-- Sample data
insert into @Order (NegotiatedPrice, SuggestedPrice) values
(0, 1),
(2, 1),
(3, null),
(null, 4);

-- Query
SELECT 
     o.OrderId, o.NegotiatedPrice, o.SuggestedPrice, 
     IIF(o.NegotiatedPrice >= o.SuggestedPrice, o.NegotiatedPrice, ISNULL(o.SuggestedPrice, o.NegotiatedPrice)) AS MaxPrice
FROM @Order o

Result:

OrderId NegotiatedPrice SuggestedPrice  MaxPrice
1       0,00            1,00            1,00
2       2,00            1,00            2,00
3       3,00            NULL            3,00
4       NULL            4,00            4,00

But if one needs the maximum of multiple columns?
Then I suggest a CROSS APPLY on an aggregation of the VALUES.

Example:

SELECT t.*
, ca.[Maximum]
, ca.[Minimum], ca.[Total], ca.[Average]
FROM SomeTable t
CROSS APPLY (
   SELECT 
    MAX(v.col) AS [Maximum], 
    MIN(v.col) AS [Minimum], 
    SUM(v.col) AS [Total], 
    AVG(v.col) AS [Average]
   FROM (VALUES (t.Col1), (t.Col2), (t.Col3), (t.Col4)) v(col)
) ca

This has the extra benefit that this can calculate other things at the same time.

12
votes

The other answers are good, but if you have to worry about having NULL values, you may want this variant:

SELECT o.OrderId, 
   CASE WHEN ISNULL(o.NegotiatedPrice, o.SuggestedPrice) > ISNULL(o.SuggestedPrice, o.NegotiatedPrice)
        THEN ISNULL(o.NegotiatedPrice, o.SuggestedPrice)
        ELSE ISNULL(o.SuggestedPrice, o.NegotiatedPrice)
   END
FROM Order o
11
votes

Sub Queries can access the columns from the Outer query so you can use this approach to use aggregates such as MAX across columns. (Probably more useful when there is a greater number of columns involved though)

;WITH [Order] AS
(
SELECT 1 AS OrderId, 100 AS NegotiatedPrice, 110 AS SuggestedPrice UNION ALL
SELECT 2 AS OrderId, 1000 AS NegotiatedPrice, 50 AS SuggestedPrice
)
SELECT
       o.OrderId, 
       (SELECT MAX(price)FROM 
           (SELECT o.NegotiatedPrice AS price 
            UNION ALL SELECT o.SuggestedPrice) d) 
        AS MaxPrice 
FROM  [Order]  o
7
votes
SELECT o.OrderId,   
--MAX(o.NegotiatedPrice, o.SuggestedPrice)  
(SELECT MAX(v) FROM (VALUES (o.NegotiatedPrice), (o.SuggestedPrice)) AS value(v)) as ChoosenPrice  
FROM Order o
6
votes

I would go with the solution provided by kcrumley Just modify it slightly to handle NULLs

create function dbo.HigherArgumentOrNull(@val1 int, @val2 int)
returns int
as
begin
  if @val1 >= @val2
    return @val1
  if @val1 < @val2
    return @val2

 return NULL
end

EDIT Modified after comment from Mark. As he correctly pointed out in 3 valued logic x > NULL or x < NULL should always return NULL. In other words unknown result.

6
votes

SQL Server 2012 introduced IIF:

SELECT 
    o.OrderId, 
    IIF( ISNULL( o.NegotiatedPrice, 0 ) > ISNULL( o.SuggestedPrice, 0 ),
         o.NegotiatedPrice, 
         o.SuggestedPrice 
    )
FROM 
    Order o

Handling NULLs is recommended when using IIF, because a NULL on either side of your boolean_expression will cause IIF to return the false_value (as opposed to NULL).

4
votes

I probably wouldn't do it this way, as it's less efficient than the already mentioned CASE constructs - unless, perhaps, you had covering indexes for both queries. Either way, it's a useful technique for similar problems:

SELECT OrderId, MAX(Price) as Price FROM (
   SELECT o.OrderId, o.NegotiatedPrice as Price FROM Order o
   UNION ALL
   SELECT o.OrderId, o.SuggestedPrice as Price FROM Order o
) as A
GROUP BY OrderId
4
votes

Oops, I just posted a dupe of this question...

The answer is, there is no built in function like Oracle's Greatest, but you can achieve a similar result for 2 columns with a UDF, note, the use of sql_variant is quite important here.

create table #t (a int, b int) 

insert #t
select 1,2 union all 
select 3,4 union all
select 5,2

-- option 1 - A case statement
select case when a > b then a else b end
from #t

-- option 2 - A union statement 
select a from #t where a >= b 
union all 
select b from #t where b > a 

-- option 3 - A udf
create function dbo.GREATEST
( 
    @a as sql_variant,
    @b as sql_variant
)
returns sql_variant
begin   
    declare @max sql_variant 
    if @a is null or @b is null return null
    if @b > @a return @b  
    return @a 
end


select dbo.GREATEST(a,b)
from #t

kristof

Posted this answer:

create table #t (id int IDENTITY(1,1), a int, b int)
insert #t
select 1,2 union all
select 3,4 union all
select 5,2

select id, max(val)
from #t
    unpivot (val for col in (a, b)) as unpvt
group by id
4
votes

Its as simple as this:

CREATE FUNCTION InlineMax
(
    @p1 sql_variant,
    @p2 sql_variant
)  RETURNS sql_variant
AS
BEGIN
    RETURN CASE 
        WHEN @p1 IS NULL AND @p2 IS NOT NULL THEN @p2 
        WHEN @p2 IS NULL AND @p1 IS NOT NULL THEN @p1
        WHEN @p1 > @p2 THEN @p1
        ELSE @p2 END
END;
4
votes

YES, THERE IS.

T-SQL now supports GREATEST/LEAST functions:

MAX/MIN as NON-aggregate function

This is now live for Azure SQL Database and SQL Managed Instance. It will roll into the next version of SQL Server.

Logical Functions - GREATEST (Transact-SQL)

This function returns the maximum value from a list of one or more expressions.

GREATEST ( expression1 [ ,...expressionN ] ) 

So in this case:

SELECT o.OrderId, GREATEST(o.NegotiatedPrice, o.SuggestedPrice)
FROM Order o
3
votes

For the answer above regarding large numbers, you could do the multiplication before the addition/subtraction. It's a bit bulkier but requires no cast. (I can't speak for speed but I assume it's still pretty quick)

SELECT 0.5 * ((@val1 + @val2) + ABS(@val1 - @val2))

Changes to

SELECT @val1*0.5+@val2*0.5 + ABS(@val1*0.5 - @val2*0.5)

at least an alternative if you want to avoid casting.

3
votes

Here's a case example that should handle nulls and will work with older versions of MSSQL. This is based on the inline function in one one of the popular examples:

case
  when a >= b then a
  else isnull(b,a)
end
3
votes

Try this. It can handle more than 2 values

SELECT Max(v) FROM (VALUES (1), (2), (3)) AS value(v)
2
votes

You can do something like this:

select case when o.NegotiatedPrice > o.SuggestedPrice 
then o.NegotiatedPrice
else o.SuggestedPrice
end
2
votes
SELECT o.OrderID
CASE WHEN o.NegotiatedPrice > o.SuggestedPrice THEN
 o.NegotiatedPrice
ELSE
 o.SuggestedPrice
END AS Price
2
votes
CREATE FUNCTION [dbo].[fnMax] (@p1 INT, @p2 INT)
RETURNS INT
AS BEGIN

    DECLARE @Result INT

    SET @p2 = COALESCE(@p2, @p1)

    SELECT
        @Result = (
                   SELECT
                    CASE WHEN @p1 > @p2 THEN @p1
                         ELSE @p2
                    END
                  )

    RETURN @Result

END
2
votes

Here is @Scott Langham's answer with simple NULL handling:

SELECT
      o.OrderId,
      CASE WHEN (o.NegotiatedPrice > o.SuggestedPrice OR o.SuggestedPrice IS NULL) 
         THEN o.NegotiatedPrice 
         ELSE o.SuggestedPrice
      END As MaxPrice
FROM Order o
2
votes

Here is an IIF version with NULL handling (based on of Xin's answer):

IIF(a IS NULL OR b IS NULL, ISNULL(a,b), IIF(a > b, a, b))

The logic is as follows, if either of the values is NULL, return the one that isn't NULL (if both are NULL, a NULL is returned). Otherwise return the greater one.

Same can be done for MIN.

IIF(a IS NULL OR b IS NULL, ISNULL(a,b), IIF(a < b, a, b))
2
votes
 -- Simple way without "functions" or "IF" or "CASE"
 -- Query to select maximum value
 SELECT o.OrderId
  ,(SELECT MAX(v)
   FROM (VALUES (o.NegotiatedPrice), (o.SuggestedPrice)) AS value(v)) AS MaxValue
  FROM Order o;
1
votes

In its simplest form...

CREATE FUNCTION fnGreatestInt (@Int1 int, @Int2 int )
RETURNS int
AS
BEGIN

    IF @Int1 >= ISNULL(@Int2,@Int1)
        RETURN @Int1
    ELSE
        RETURN @Int2

    RETURN NULL --Never Hit

END
1
votes

For SQL Server 2012:

SELECT 
    o.OrderId, 
    IIF( o.NegotiatedPrice >= o.SuggestedPrice,
         o.NegotiatedPrice, 
         ISNULL(o.SuggestedPrice, o.NegiatedPrice) 
    )
FROM 
    Order o
1
votes
select OrderId, (
    select max([Price]) from (
        select NegotiatedPrice [Price]
        union all
        select SuggestedPrice
    ) p
) from [Order]
1
votes

Expanding on Xin's answer and assuming the comparison value type is INT, this approach works too:

SELECT IIF(ISNULL(@A, -2147483648) > ISNULL(@B, -2147483648), @A, @B)

This is a full test with example values:

DECLARE @A AS INT
DECLARE @B AS INT

SELECT  @A = 2, @B = 1
SELECT  IIF(ISNULL(@A, -2147483648) > ISNULL(@B, -2147483648), @A, @B)
-- 2

SELECT  @A = 2, @B = 3
SELECT  IIF(ISNULL(@A, -2147483648) > ISNULL(@B, -2147483648), @A, @B)
-- 3

SELECT  @A = 2, @B = NULL
SELECT  IIF(ISNULL(@A, -2147483648) > ISNULL(@B, -2147483648), @A, @B)
-- 2    

SELECT  @A = NULL, @B = 1
SELECT  IIF(ISNULL(@A, -2147483648) > ISNULL(@B, -2147483648), @A, @B)
-- 1
-1
votes

In MemSQL do the following:

-- DROP FUNCTION IF EXISTS InlineMax;
DELIMITER //
CREATE FUNCTION InlineMax(val1 INT, val2 INT) RETURNS INT AS
DECLARE
  val3 INT = 0;
BEGIN
 IF val1 > val2 THEN
   RETURN val1;
 ELSE
   RETURN val2;
 END IF; 
END //
DELIMITER ;

SELECT InlineMax(1,2) as test;