Combines two Boolean expressions and returns TRUE when both expressions are TRUE. When more than one logical operator is used in a statement, the AND operators are evaluated first. You can change the order of evaluation by using parentheses.
Transact-SQL Syntax Conventions
boolean_expression AND boolean_expression
boolean_expression
Is any valid expression that returns a Boolean value: TRUE, FALSE, or UNKNOWN.
Boolean
Returns TRUE when both expressions are TRUE.
The following chart shows the outcomes when you compare TRUE and FALSE values by using the AND operator.
TRUE | FALSE | UNKNOWN | |
---|---|---|---|
TRUE | TRUE | FALSE | UNKNOWN |
FALSE | FALSE | FALSE | FALSE |
UNKNOWN | UNKNOWN | FALSE | UNKNOWN |
The following example selects information about employees who have both the title of Marketing Assistant
and more than 41
vacation hours available.
-- Uses AdventureWorks
SELECT BusinessEntityID, LoginID, JobTitle, VacationHours
FROM HumanResources.Employee
WHERE JobTitle = 'Marketing Assistant'
AND VacationHours > 41 ;
The following examples show how to use AND in an IF statement. In the first statement, both 1 = 1
and 2 = 2
are true; therefore, the result is true. In the second example, the argument 2 = 17
is false; therefore, the result is false.
IF 1 = 1 AND 2 = 2
BEGIN
PRINT 'First Example is TRUE'
END
ELSE PRINT 'First Example is FALSE';
GO
IF 1 = 1 AND 2 = 17
BEGIN
PRINT 'Second Example is TRUE'
END
ELSE PRINT 'Second Example is FALSE' ;
GO
Built-in Functions (Transact-SQL)
Operators (Transact-SQL)
SELECT (Transact-SQL)
WHERE (Transact-SQL)