Microsoft and innovation: IIF() method
This Saturday I was watching a couple of eLearning videos from TrainSignal (thanks to the subscription I have with Pluralsight) on Querying Microsoft SQL Server 2012 (exam 70-461).
'Innovation' by Microsoft
I kept myself busy learning 'new' things about Microsoft SQL Server 2012 and some best practices. It was incredible 'innovative' to see that there is an additional logic function called IIF() available now:
Returns one of two values depending on the value of a logical expression.
IIF(lExpression, eExpression1, eExpression2)
Ups, my bad... That's actually taken from the syntax page of Visual FoxPro 9.0 SP 2. And tada, at least seven (7+) years later, there's the recent IIF() Transact-SQL version of that function:
Returns one of two values, depending on whether the Boolean expression evaluates to true or false in SQL Server 2012.
IIF ( boolean_expression, true_value, false_value )
Now, that's what I call innovation! But we all know what happened to Visual FoxPro... It has been reincarnated in form of Visual Studio LightSwitch (and SQL Server).
Enough ranting... Happy coding!