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Operator Precedence (Transact-SQL)

When a complex expression has multiple operators, operator precedence determines the sequence in which the operations are performed. The order of execution can significantly affect the resulting value.

Operators have the precedence levels shown in the following table. An operator on higher levels is evaluated before an operator on a lower level.

Level Operators

1

~ (Bitwise NOT)

2

* (Multiply), / (Division), % (Modulo)

3

+ (Positive), - (Negative), + (Add), (+ Concatenate), - (Subtract), & (Bitwise AND)

4

=, >, <, >=, <=, <>, !=, !>, !< (Comparison operators)

5

^ (Bitwise Exlusive OR), | (Bitwise OR)

6

NOT

7

AND

8

ALL, ANY, BETWEEN, IN, LIKE, OR, SOME

9

= (Assignment)

When two operators in an expression have the same operator precedence level, they are evaluated left to right based on their position in the expression. For example, in the expression that is used in the following SET statement, the subtraction operator is evaluated before the addition operator.

DECLARE @MyNumber int
SET @MyNumber = 4 - 2 + 27
-- Evaluates to 2 + 27 which yields an expression result of 29.
SELECT @MyNumber

Use parentheses to override the defined precedence of the operators in an expression. Everything within the parentheses is evaluated first to yield a single value before that value can be used by any operator outside the parentheses.

For example, in the expression used in the following SET statement, the multiplication operator has a higher precedence than the addition operator. Therefore, it is evaluated first; the expression result is 13.

DECLARE @MyNumber int
SET @MyNumber = 2 * 4 + 5
-- Evaluates to 8 + 5 which yields an expression result of 13.
SELECT @MyNumber

In the expression used in the following SET statement, the parentheses cause the addition to be performed first. The expression result is 18.

DECLARE @MyNumber int
SET @MyNumber = 2 * (4 + 5)
-- Evaluates to 2 * 9 which yields an expression result of 18.
SELECT @MyNumber

If an expression has nested parentheses, the most deeply nested expression is evaluated first. The following example contains nested parentheses, with the expression 5 - 3 in the most deeply nested set of parentheses. This expression yields a value of 2. Then, the addition operator (+) adds this result to 4. This yields a value of 6. Finally, the 6 is multiplied by 2 to yield an expression result of 12.

DECLARE @MyNumber int
SET @MyNumber = 2 * (4 + (5 - 3) )
-- Evaluates to 2 * (4 + 2) which then evaluates to 2 * 6, and 
-- yields an expression result of 12.
SELECT @MyNumber

See Also

Reference

Operators (Transact-SQL)
Functions (Transact-SQL)

Help and Information

Getting SQL Server 2005 Assistance