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Does anyone know, why Oracle's NVL (and NVL2) function always evaluate the second parameter, even if the first parameter is not NULL?

Simple test:

CREATE FUNCTION nvl_test RETURN NUMBER AS
BEGIN
  dbms_output.put_line('Called');
  RETURN 1;
END nvl_test;

SELECT NVL( 0, nvl_test ) FROM dual

returns 0, but also prints Called.

nvl_test has been called, even though the result is ignored since first parameter is not NULL.

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It's always been that way, so Oracle has to keep it that way to remain backwards compatible.

Use COALESCE instead to get the short-circuit behaviour.


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