Chris Aiello wrote: > hi all: > > I'm trying to figure out SQL to do the following: > I have an application that tracks SQL that is being sent to the database, > and one of it's features is the ability to identify whether a query is an > insert, update, delete, select, select with all rows returned, the query is > the first in a user session....and many other criteria. Because of the > nature of SQL, i.e. many of the above could be true, the deisgners made each > flag a 'bit'. So an example is: > 4 is a select > 8 is insert > 16 is update > 32 is first query in session > 64 is delete > 128 is a cancelled query > 256 is database cancelled query > > > > Now the SQL that I have to find is 'which of these records is a delete?' > The values could be 64, 96, 416, 445, 320 and many others. All in all > there are probably 20 possible values and the permutations are to lengthy to > put in a 'like', so I need some kind of algorithm. Does anyone have any > ideas?
The algorithm is as simple as that: if (value & 64 == 64) { // it is a delete } -- Ahti Legonkov ---------------------------(end of broadcast)--------------------------- TIP 4: Don't 'kill -9' the postmaster