I don't have Office 2000, but I can confirm Access 97 generates such 
queries. The query-builder doesn't generate the 'key = NULL' query, but the 
use of the Forms interface does.

Mike Mascari
[EMAIL PROTECTED]

-----Original Message-----
From:   Tom Lane [SMTP:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
Sent:   Sunday, January 14, 2001 2:00 PM
To:     Stephan Szabo
Cc:     [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject:        [HACKERS] MS Access vs IS NULL (was Re: [BUGS] Bug in SQL 
functions that use a NULL parameter directly)

Stephan Szabo <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> Because of Access's brokenness, the parser or some other layer of the
> code "fixes" explicit = NULL (ie, in the actually query string) into
> IS NULL which is the correct way to check for nulls.
> Because your original query was = $1, it doesn't do the mangling of the
> SQL to change into IS NULL when $1 is NULL.  The fact that we do that
> conversion at all actually breaks spec a little bit but we have little
> choice with broken clients.

It seems to me that we heard awhile ago that Access no longer generates
these non-spec-compliant queries --- ie, it does say IS NULL now rather
than the other thing.  If so, it seems to me that we ought to remove the
parser's = NULL hack, so that we have spec-compliant NULL behavior.

Anyone recall anything about that?  A quick search of my archives didn't
turn up the discussion that I thought I remembered.

                        regards, tom lane

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