The usual logical operators are available:
booleanANDboolean→booleanbooleanORboolean→booleanNOTboolean→boolean
SQL uses a three-valued logic system with true,
false, and null, which represents “unknown”.
Observe the following truth tables:
a | b | a AND b | a OR b |
|---|---|---|---|
| TRUE | TRUE | TRUE | TRUE |
| TRUE | FALSE | FALSE | TRUE |
| TRUE | NULL | NULL | TRUE |
| FALSE | FALSE | FALSE | FALSE |
| FALSE | NULL | FALSE | NULL |
| NULL | NULL | NULL | NULL |
a | NOT a |
|---|---|
| TRUE | FALSE |
| FALSE | TRUE |
| NULL | NULL |
The operators AND and OR are
commutative, that is, you can switch the left and right operands
without affecting the result. (However, it is not guaranteed that
the left operand is evaluated before the right operand. See Section 4.2.14 for more information about the
order of evaluation of subexpressions.)