SQL - Structure Query Language


What is SQL?

  • SQL stands for Structured Query Language
  • SQL allows you to access a database
  • SQL is an ANSI standard computer language
  • SQL can execute queries against a database
  • SQL can retrieve data from a database
  • SQL can insert new records in a database
  • SQL can delete records from a database
  • SQL can update records in a database
  • SQL is easy to learn

SQL is a Standard - BUT....

SQL is an ANSI (American National Standards Institute) standard computer language for accessing and manipulating database systems. SQL statements are used to retrieve and update data in a database. SQL works with database programs like MS Access, DB2, Informix, MS SQL Server, Oracle, Sybase, etc.

Unfortunately, there are many different versions of the SQL language, but to be in compliance with the ANSI standard, they must support the same major keywords in a similar manner (such as SELECT, UPDATE, DELETE, INSERT, WHERE, and others).

Note: Most of the SQL database programs also have their own proprietary extensions in addition to the SQL standard!


SQL Database Tables

A database most often contains one or more tables. Each table is identified by a name (e.g. "Customers" or "Orders"). Tables contain records (rows) with data.

Below is an example of a table called "Persons":

LastName

FirstName

Address

City

Hansen

Ola

Timoteivn 10

Sandnes

Svendson

Tove

Borgvn 23

Sandnes

Pettersen

Kari

Storgt 20

Stavanger

The table above contains three records (one for each person) and four columns (LastName, FirstName, Address, and City).


SQL Queries

With SQL, we can query a database and have a result set returned.

A query like this:



SELECT LastName FROM Persons




Gives a result set like this:


















LastName



Hansen



Svendson



Pettersen





Note: Some database systems require a semicolon at the end of the SQL statement. We don't use the semicolon in our tutorials.






SQL Data Manipulation Language (DML)



SQL (Structured Query Language) is a syntax for executing queries. But the SQL language also includes a syntax to update, insert, and delete records.



These query and update commands together form the Data Manipulation Language (DML) part of SQL:




  • SELECT - extracts data from a database table


  • UPDATE - updates data in a database table


  • DELETE - deletes data from a database table


  • INSERT INTO - inserts new data into a database table






SQL Data Definition Language (DDL)



The Data Definition Language (DDL) part of SQL permits database tables to be created or deleted. We can also define indexes (keys), specify links between tables, and impose constraints between database tables.



The most important DDL statements in SQL are:




  • CREATE TABLE - creates a new database table


  • ALTER TABLE - alters (changes) a database table


  • DROP TABLE - deletes a database table


  • CREATE INDEX - creates an index (search key)


  • DROP INDEX - deletes an index



SQL SELECT Statement



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The SQL SELECT Statement



The SELECT statement is used to select data from a table. The tabular result is stored in a result table (called the result-set).



Syntax







SELECT column_name(s)


FROM table_name



clip_image003Note: SQL statements are not case sensitive. SELECT is the same as select.






SQL SELECT Example



To select the content of columns named "LastName" and "FirstName", from the database table called "Persons", use a SELECT statement like this:






SELECT LastName,FirstName FROM Persons




The database table "Persons":










































LastName



FirstName



Address



City



Hansen



Ola



Timoteivn 10



Sandnes



Svendson



Tove



Borgvn 23



Sandnes



Pettersen



Kari



Storgt 20



Stavanger





The result


























LastName



FirstName



Hansen



Ola



Svendson



Tove



Pettersen



Kari








Select All Columns



To select all columns from the "Persons" table, use a * symbol instead of column names, like this: 






SELECT * FROM Persons




Result










































LastName



FirstName



Address



City



Hansen



Ola



Timoteivn 10



Sandnes



Svendson



Tove



Borgvn 23



Sandnes



Pettersen



Kari



Storgt 20



Stavanger








The Result Set



The result from a SQL query is stored in a result-set. Most database software systems allow navigation of the result set with programming functions, like: Move-To-First-Record, Get-Record-Content, Move-To-Next-Record, etc.



Programming functions like these are not a part of this tutorial. To learn about accessing data with function calls, please visit our ADO tutorial.






Semicolon after SQL Statements?



Semicolon is the standard way to separate each SQL statement in database systems that allow more than one SQL statement to be executed in the same call to the server.



Some SQL tutorials end each SQL statement with a semicolon. Is this necessary? We are using MS Access and SQL Server 2000 and we do not have to put a semicolon after each SQL statement, but some database programs force you to use it.






The SELECT DISTINCT Statement



The DISTINCT keyword is used to return only distinct (different) values.



The SELECT statement returns information from table columns. But what if we only want to select distinct elements?



With SQL, all we need to do is to add a DISTINCT keyword to the SELECT statement:



Syntax







SELECT DISTINCT column_name(s)


FROM table_name






Using the DISTINCT keyword



To select ALL values from the column named "Company" we use a SELECT statement like this:






SELECT Company FROM Orders




"Orders" table
































Company



OrderNumber



Sega



3412



W3Schools



2312



Trio



4678



W3Schools



6798





Result






















Company



Sega



W3Schools



Trio



W3Schools





Note that "W3Schools" is listed twice in the result-set.



To select only DIFFERENT values from the column named "Company" we use a SELECT DISTINCT statement like this:






SELECT DISTINCT Company FROM Orders




Result:


















Company



Sega



W3Schools



Trio





Now "W3Schools" is listed only once in the result-set.






SQL WHERE Clause



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The WHERE clause is used to specify a selection criterion.






The WHERE Clause



To conditionally select data from a table, a WHERE clause can be added to the SELECT statement.



Syntax







SELECT column FROM table


WHERE column operator value



With the WHERE clause, the following operators can be used:
























































Operator



Description



=



Equal



<>



Not equal



>



Greater than



<



Less than



>=



Greater than or equal



<=



Less than or equal



BETWEEN



Between an inclusive range



LIKE



Search for a pattern





Note: In some versions of SQL the <> operator may be written as !=






Using the WHERE Clause



To select only the persons living in the city "Sandnes", we add a WHERE clause to the SELECT statement: 






SELECT * FROM Persons


WHERE City='Sandnes'




"Persons" table






























































LastName



FirstName



Address



City



Year



Hansen



Ola



Timoteivn 10



Sandnes



1951



Svendson



Tove



Borgvn 23



Sandnes



1978



Svendson



Stale



Kaivn 18



Sandnes



1980



Pettersen



Kari



Storgt 20



Stavanger



1960





Result


















































LastName



FirstName



Address



City



Year



Hansen



Ola



Timoteivn 10



Sandnes



1951



Svendson



Tove



Borgvn 23



Sandnes



1978



Svendson



Stale



Kaivn 18



Sandnes



1980








Using Quotes



Note that we have used single quotes around the conditional values in the examples.



SQL uses single quotes around text values (most database systems will also accept double quotes). Numeric values should not be enclosed in quotes.



For text values:






This is correct:


SELECT * FROM Persons WHERE FirstName='Tove'


This is wrong:


SELECT * FROM Persons WHERE FirstName=Tove




For numeric values:






This is correct:


SELECT * FROM Persons WHERE Year>1965


This is wrong:


SELECT * FROM Persons WHERE Year>'1965'







The LIKE Condition



The LIKE condition is used to specify a search for a pattern in a column.



Syntax







SELECT column FROM table


WHERE column LIKE pattern



A "%" sign can be used to define wildcards (missing letters in the pattern) both before and after the pattern.






Using LIKE



The following SQL statement will return persons with first names that start with an 'O':






SELECT * FROM Persons


WHERE FirstName LIKE 'O%'




The following SQL statement will return persons with first names that end with an 'a':






SELECT * FROM Persons


WHERE FirstName LIKE '%a'




The following SQL statement will return persons with first names that contain the pattern 'la':






SELECT * FROM Persons


WHERE FirstName LIKE '%la%'




SQL INSERT INTO Statement



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The INSERT INTO Statement



The INSERT INTO statement is used to insert new rows into a table.



Syntax







INSERT INTO table_name


VALUES (value1, value2,....)



You can also specify the columns for which you want to insert data:






INSERT INTO table_name (column1, column2,...)


VALUES (value1, value2,....)







Insert a New Row



This "Persons" table:






















LastName



FirstName



Address



City



Pettersen



Kari



Storgt 20



Stavanger





And this SQL statement:






INSERT INTO Persons 


VALUES ('Hetland', 'Camilla', 'Hagabakka 24', 'Sandnes')




Will give this result:
































LastName



FirstName



Address



City



Pettersen



Kari



Storgt 20



Stavanger



Hetland



Camilla



Hagabakka 24



Sandnes








Insert Data in Specified Columns



This "Persons" table:
































LastName



FirstName



Address



City



Pettersen



Kari



Storgt 20



Stavanger



Hetland



Camilla



Hagabakka 24



Sandnes





And This SQL statement:






INSERT INTO Persons (LastName, Address)


VALUES ('Rasmussen', 'Storgt 67')




Will give this result:










































LastName



FirstName



Address



City



Pettersen



Kari



Storgt 20



Stavanger



Hetland



Camilla



Hagabakka 24



Sandnes



Rasmussen


 

Storgt 67


 






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SQL UPDATE Statement



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The Update Statement



The UPDATE statement is used to modify the data in a table.



Syntax







UPDATE table_name


SET column_name = new_value


WHERE column_name = some_value






Person:
































LastName



FirstName



Address



City



Nilsen



Fred



Kirkegt 56



Stavanger



Rasmussen


 

Storgt 67


 






Update one Column in a Row



We want to add a first name to the person with a last name of "Rasmussen":






UPDATE Person SET FirstName = 'Nina'


WHERE LastName = 'Rasmussen'




Result:
































LastName



FirstName



Address



City



Nilsen



Fred



Kirkegt 56



Stavanger



Rasmussen



Nina



Storgt 67


 






Update several Columns in a Row



We want to change the address and add the name of the city:






UPDATE Person


SET Address = 'Stien 12', City = 'Stavanger'


WHERE LastName = 'Rasmussen'




Result:
































LastName



FirstName



Address



City



Nilsen



Fred



Kirkegt 56



Stavanger



Rasmussen



Nina



Stien 12



Stavanger





SQL DELETE Statement



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The DELETE Statement



The DELETE statement is used to delete rows in a table.



Syntax







DELETE FROM table_name


WHERE column_name = some_value






Person:
































LastName



FirstName



Address



City



Nilsen



Fred



Kirkegt 56



Stavanger



Rasmussen



Nina



Stien 12



Stavanger








Delete a Row



"Nina Rasmussen" is going to be deleted:






DELETE FROM Person WHERE LastName = 'Rasmussen'




Result






















LastName



FirstName



Address



City



Nilsen



Fred



Kirkegt 56



Stavanger








Delete All Rows



It is possible to delete all rows in a table without deleting the table. This means that the table structure, attributes, and indexes will be intact:






DELETE FROM table_name


or


DELETE * FROM table_name




SQL ORDER BY



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The ORDER BY keyword is used to sort the result.






Sort the Rows



The ORDER BY clause is used to sort the rows.



Orders:
































Company



OrderNumber



Sega



3412



ABC Shop



5678



W3Schools



2312



W3Schools



6798





Example



To display the companies in alphabetical order:






SELECT Company, OrderNumber FROM Orders


ORDER BY Company




Result:
































Company



OrderNumber



ABC Shop



5678



Sega



3412



W3Schools



6798



W3Schools



2312





Example



To display the companies in alphabetical order AND the ordernumbers in numerical order:






SELECT Company, OrderNumber FROM Orders


ORDER BY Company, OrderNumber




Result:
































Company



OrderNumber



ABC Shop



5678



Sega



3412



W3Schools



2312



W3Schools



6798





Example



To display the companies in reverse alphabetical order:






SELECT Company, OrderNumber FROM Orders


ORDER BY Company DESC




Result:
































Company



OrderNumber



W3Schools



6798



W3Schools



2312



Sega



3412



ABC Shop



5678





Example



To display the companies in reverse alphabetical order AND the ordernumbers in numerical order:






SELECT Company, OrderNumber FROM Orders


ORDER BY Company DESC, OrderNumber ASC




Result:
































Company



OrderNumber



W3Schools



2312



W3Schools



6798



Sega



3412



ABC Shop



5678








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SQL AND & OR



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AND & OR



AND and OR join two or more conditions in a WHERE clause.



The AND operator displays a row if ALL conditions listed are true. The OR operator displays a row if ANY of the conditions listed are true.






Original Table (used in the examples)












































LastName



FirstName



Address



City



Hansen



Ola



Timoteivn 10



Sandnes



Svendson



Tove



Borgvn 23



Sandnes



Svendson



Stephen



Kaivn 18



Sandnes







Example



Use AND to display each person with the first name equal to "Tove", and the last name equal to "Svendson":






SELECT * FROM Persons


WHERE FirstName='Tove'


AND LastName='Svendson'




Result:






















LastName



FirstName



Address



City



Svendson



Tove



Borgvn 23



Sandnes





Example



Use OR to display each person with the first name equal to "Tove", or the last name equal to "Svendson":






SELECT * FROM Persons


WHERE firstname='Tove'


OR lastname='Svendson'




Result:
































LastName



FirstName



Address



City



Svendson



Tove



Borgvn 23



Sandnes



Svendson



Stephen



Kaivn 18



Sandnes





Example



You can also combine AND and OR (use parentheses to form complex expressions):






SELECT * FROM Persons WHERE


(FirstName='Tove' OR FirstName='Stephen')


AND LastName='Svendson'




Result:
































LastName



FirstName



Address



City



Svendson



Tove



Borgvn 23



Sandnes



Svendson



Stephen



Kaivn 18



Sandnes





SQL IN



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IN



The IN operator may be used if you know the exact value you want to return for at least one of the columns.






SELECT column_name FROM table_name


WHERE column_name IN (value1,value2,..)







Original Table (used in the examples)






















































LastName



FirstName



Address



City



Hansen



Ola



Timoteivn 10



Sandnes



Nordmann



Anna



Neset 18



Sandnes



Pettersen



Kari



Storgt 20



Stavanger



Svendson



Tove



Borgvn 23



Sandnes







Example 1



To display the persons with LastName equal to "Hansen" or "Pettersen", use the following SQL:






SELECT * FROM Persons


WHERE LastName IN ('Hansen','Pettersen')




Result:
































LastName



FirstName



Address



City



Hansen



Ola



Timoteivn 10



Sandnes



Pettersen



Kari



Storgt 20



Stavanger








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SQL BETWEEN



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BETWEEN ... AND



The BETWEEN ... AND operator selects a range of data between two values. These values can be numbers, text, or dates.






SELECT column_name FROM table_name


WHERE column_name


BETWEEN value1 AND value2







Original Table (used in the examples)






















































LastName



FirstName



Address



City



Hansen



Ola



Timoteivn 10



Sandnes



Nordmann



Anna



Neset 18



Sandnes



Pettersen



Kari



Storgt 20



Stavanger



Svendson



Tove



Borgvn 23



Sandnes







Example 1



To display the persons alphabetically between (and including) "Hansen" and exclusive "Pettersen", use the following SQL:






SELECT * FROM Persons WHERE LastName 


BETWEEN 'Hansen' AND 'Pettersen'




Result:
































LastName



FirstName



Address



City



Hansen



Ola



Timoteivn 10



Sandnes



Nordmann



Anna



Neset 18



Sandnes





IMPORTANT! The BETWEEN...AND operator is treated differently in different databases. With some databases a person with the LastName of "Hansen" or "Pettersen" will not be listed (BETWEEN..AND only selects fields that are between and excluding the test values). With some databases a person with the last name of "Hansen" or "Pettersen" will be listed (BETWEEN..AND selects fields that are between and including the test values). With other databases a person with the last name of "Hansen" will be listed, but "Pettersen" will not be listed (BETWEEN..AND selects fields between the test values, including the first test value and excluding the last test value). Therefore: Check how your database treats the BETWEEN....AND operator!






Example 2



To display the persons outside the range used in the previous example, use the NOT operator:






SELECT * FROM Persons WHERE LastName 


NOT BETWEEN 'Hansen' AND 'Pettersen'




Result:
































LastName



FirstName



Address



City



Pettersen



Kari



Storgt 20



Stavanger



Svendson



Tove



Borgvn 23



Sandnes








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SQL Alias



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With SQL, aliases can be used for column names and table names.






Column Name Alias



The syntax is:






SELECT column AS column_alias FROM table







Table Name Alias



The syntax is:






SELECT column FROM table AS table_alias







Example: Using a Column Alias



This table (Persons):










































LastName



FirstName



Address



City



Hansen



Ola



Timoteivn 10



Sandnes



Svendson



Tove



Borgvn 23



Sandnes



Pettersen



Kari



Storgt 20



Stavanger





And this SQL:






SELECT LastName AS Family, FirstName AS Name


FROM Persons




Returns this result:


























Family



Name



Hansen



Ola



Svendson



Tove



Pettersen



Kari








Example: Using a Table Alias



This table (Persons):










































LastName



FirstName



Address



City



Hansen



Ola



Timoteivn 10



Sandnes



Svendson



Tove



Borgvn 23



Sandnes



Pettersen



Kari



Storgt 20



Stavanger





And this SQL:






SELECT LastName, FirstName


FROM Persons AS Employees




Returns this result:



Table Employees:


























LastName



FirstName



Hansen



Ola



Svendson



Tove



Pettersen



Kari








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SQL JOIN



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Joins and Keys



Sometimes we have to select data from two or more tables to make our result complete. We have to perform a join.



Tables in a database can be related to each other with keys. A primary key is a column with a unique value for each row. The purpose is to bind data together, across tables, without repeating all of the data in every table.



In the "Employees" table below, the "Employee_ID" column is the primary key, meaning that no two rows can have the same Employee_ID. The Employee_ID distinguishes two persons even if they have the same name.



When you look at the example tables below, notice that: 




  • The "Employee_ID" column is the primary key of the "Employees" table


  • The "Prod_ID" column is the primary key of the "Orders" table


  • The "Employee_ID" column in the "Orders" table is used to refer to the persons in the "Employees" table without using their names






Employees:
































Employee_ID



Name



01



Hansen, Ola



02



Svendson, Tove



03



Svendson, Stephen



04



Pettersen, Kari





Orders:


































Prod_ID



Product



Employee_ID



234



Printer



01



657



Table



03



865



Chair



03








Referring to Two Tables



We can select data from two tables by referring to two tables, like this:



Example


Who has ordered a product, and what did they order?






SELECT Employees.Name, Orders.Product


FROM Employees, Orders


WHERE Employees.Employee_ID=Orders.Employee_ID




Result


























Name



Product



Hansen, Ola



Printer



Svendson, Stephen



Table



Svendson, Stephen



Chair





Example


Who ordered a printer?






SELECT Employees.Name


FROM Employees, Orders


WHERE Employees.Employee_ID=Orders.Employee_ID


AND Orders.Product='Printer'




Result










Name



Hansen, Ola








Using Joins



OR we can select data from two tables with the JOIN keyword, like this:



Example INNER JOIN


Syntax






SELECT field1, field2, field3


FROM first_table


INNER JOIN second_table


ON first_table.keyfield = second_table.foreign_keyfield




Who has ordered a product, and what did they order?






SELECT Employees.Name, Orders.Product


FROM Employees


INNER JOIN Orders


ON Employees.Employee_ID=Orders.Employee_ID




The INNER JOIN returns all rows from both tables where there is a match. If there are rows in Employees that do not have matches in Orders, those rows will not be listed.



Result


























Name



Product



Hansen, Ola



Printer



Svendson, Stephen



Table



Svendson, Stephen



Chair





Example LEFT JOIN


Syntax






SELECT field1, field2, field3


FROM first_table


LEFT JOIN second_table


ON first_table.keyfield = second_table.foreign_keyfield




List all employees, and their orders - if any.






SELECT Employees.Name, Orders.Product


FROM Employees


LEFT JOIN Orders


ON Employees.Employee_ID=Orders.Employee_ID




The LEFT JOIN returns all the rows from the first table (Employees), even if there are no matches in the second table (Orders). If there are rows in Employees that do not have matches in Orders, those rows also will be listed.



Result






































Name



Product



Hansen, Ola



Printer



Svendson, Tove


 

Svendson, Stephen



Table



Svendson, Stephen



Chair



Pettersen, Kari


 



Example RIGHT JOIN


Syntax






SELECT field1, field2, field3


FROM first_table


RIGHT JOIN second_table


ON first_table.keyfield = second_table.foreign_keyfield




List all orders, and who has ordered - if any.






SELECT Employees.Name, Orders.Product


FROM Employees


RIGHT JOIN Orders


ON Employees.Employee_ID=Orders.Employee_ID




The RIGHT JOIN returns all the rows from the second table (Orders), even if there are no matches in the first table (Employees). If there had been any rows in Orders that did not have matches in Employees, those rows also would have been listed.



Result


























Name



Product



Hansen, Ola



Printer



Svendson, Stephen



Table



Svendson, Stephen



Chair





Example


Who ordered a printer?






SELECT Employees.Name


FROM Employees


INNER JOIN Orders


ON Employees.Employee_ID=Orders.Employee_ID


WHERE Orders.Product = 'Printer'




Result










Name



Hansen, Ola








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SQL UNION and UNION ALL



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UNION



The UNION command is used to select related information from two tables, much like the JOIN command. However, when using the UNION command all selected columns need to be of the same data type.



Note: With UNION, only distinct values are selected.






SQL Statement 1


UNION


SQL Statement 2







Employees_Norway:
































Employee_ID



E_Name



01



Hansen, Ola



02



Svendson, Tove



03



Svendson, Stephen



04



Pettersen, Kari





Employees_USA:
































Employee_ID



E_Name



01



Turner, Sally



02



Kent, Clark



03



Svendson, Stephen



04



Scott, Stephen








Using the UNION Command



Example


List all different employee names in Norway and USA:






SELECT E_Name FROM Employees_Norway


UNION


SELECT E_Name FROM Employees_USA




Result


































Name



Hansen, Ola



Svendson, Tove



Svendson, Stephen



Pettersen, Kari



Turner, Sally



Kent, Clark



Scott, Stephen





Note: This command cannot be used to list all employees in Norway and USA. In the example above we have two employees with equal names, and only one of them is listed. The UNION command only selects distinct values.






UNION ALL



The UNION ALL command is equal to the UNION command, except that UNION ALL selects all values.






SQL Statement 1


UNION ALL


SQL Statement 2







Using the UNION ALL Command



Example


List all employees in Norway and USA:






SELECT E_Name FROM Employees_Norway


UNION ALL


SELECT E_Name FROM Employees_USA




Result






































Name



Hansen, Ola



Svendson, Tove



Svendson, Stephen



Pettersen, Kari



Turner, Sally



Kent, Clark



Svendson, Stephen



Scott, Stephen








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SQL Create Database, Table, and Index



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Create a Database



To create a database:






CREATE DATABASE database_name







Create a Table



To create a table in a database:






CREATE TABLE table_name


(


column_name1 data_type,


column_name2 data_type,


.......


)




Example


This example demonstrates how you can create a table named "Person", with four columns. The column names will be "LastName", "FirstName", "Address", and "Age":






CREATE TABLE Person 


(


LastName varchar,


FirstName varchar,


Address varchar,


Age int


)




This example demonstrates how you can specify a maximum length for some columns:






CREATE TABLE Person 


(


LastName varchar(30),


FirstName varchar,


Address varchar,


Age int(3) 


)




The data type specifies what type of data the column can hold. The table below contains the most common data types in SQL:






































Data Type



Description



integer(size)

int(size)


smallint(size)


tinyint(size)



Hold integers only. The maximum number of digits are specified in parenthesis.



decimal(size,d)

numeric(size,d)



Hold numbers with fractions. The maximum number of digits are specified in "size". The maximum number of digits to the right of the decimal is specified in "d".



char(size)



Holds a fixed length string (can contain letters, numbers, and special characters). The fixed size is specified in parenthesis.



varchar(size)



Holds a variable length string (can contain letters, numbers, and special characters). The maximum size is specified in parenthesis.



date(yyyymmdd)



Holds a date








Create Index



Indices are created in an existing table to locate rows more quickly and efficiently. It is possible to create an index on one or more columns of a table, and each index is given a name. The users cannot see the indexes, they are just used to speed up queries.



Note: Updating a table containing indexes takes more time than updating a table without, this is because the indexes also need an update. So, it is a good idea to create indexes only on columns that are often used for a search.



A Unique Index



Creates a unique index on a table. A unique index means that two rows cannot have the same index value.






CREATE UNIQUE INDEX index_name


ON table_name (column_name)




The "column_name" specifies the column you want indexed.



A Simple Index



Creates a simple index on a table. When the UNIQUE keyword is omitted, duplicate values are allowed.






CREATE INDEX index_name


ON table_name (column_name)




The "column_name" specifies the column you want indexed.



Example


This example creates a simple index, named "PersonIndex", on the LastName field of the Person table:






CREATE INDEX PersonIndex


ON Person (LastName)




If you want to index the values in a column in descending order, you can add the reserved word DESC after the column name:






CREATE INDEX PersonIndex


ON Person (LastName DESC)




If you want to index more than one column you can list the column names within the parentheses, separated by commas:






CREATE INDEX PersonIndex


ON Person (LastName, FirstName)




SQL Drop Index, Table and Database



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Drop Index



You can delete an existing index in a table with the DROP statement.






DROP INDEX table_name.index_name







Delete a Table or Database



To delete a table (the table structure, attributes, and indexes will also be deleted):






DROP TABLE table_name




To delete a database:






DROP DATABASE database_name







Truncate a Table



What if we only want to get rid of the data inside a table, and not the table itself? Use the TRUNCATE TABLE command (deletes only the data inside the table):






TRUNCATE TABLE table_name







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SQL ALTER TABLE



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ALTER TABLE



The ALTER TABLE statement is used to add or drop columns in an existing table.






ALTER TABLE table_name 


ADD column_name datatype


ALTER TABLE table_name 


DROP COLUMN column_name




Note: Some database systems don't allow the dropping of a column in a database table (DROP COLUMN column_name).






Person:


















LastName



FirstName



Address



Pettersen



Kari



Storgt 20








Example



To add a column named "City" in the "Person" table:






ALTER TABLE Person ADD City varchar(30)




Result:






















LastName



FirstName



Address



City



Pettersen



Kari



Storgt 20


 



Example



To drop the "Address" column in the "Person" table:






ALTER TABLE Person DROP COLUMN Address




Result:


















LastName



FirstName



City



Pettersen



Kari


 






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SQL Functions



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SQL has a lot of built-in functions for counting and calculations.






Function Syntax



The syntax for built-in SQL functions is:






SELECT function(column) FROM table







Types of Functions



There are several basic types and categories of functions in SQL. The basic types of functions are:




  • Aggregate Functions


  • Scalar functions






Aggregate functions



Aggregate functions operate against a collection of values, but return a single value.



Note: If used among many other expressions in the item list of a SELECT statement, the SELECT must have a GROUP BY clause!!



"Persons" table (used in most examples)



























Name



Age



Hansen, Ola



34



Svendson, Tove



45



Pettersen, Kari



19




Aggregate functions in MS Access

















































































Function



Description



AVG(column)



Returns the average value of a column



COUNT(column)



Returns the number of rows (without a NULL value) of a column



COUNT(*)



Returns the number of selected rows



FIRST(column)



Returns the value of the first record in a specified field



LAST(column)



Returns the value of the last record in a specified field



MAX(column)



Returns the highest value of a column



MIN(column)



Returns the lowest value of a column



STDEV(column)


 

STDEVP(column)


 

SUM(column)



Returns the total sum of a column



VAR(column)


 

VARP(column)


 


Aggregate functions in SQL Server









































































































Function



Description



AVG(column)



Returns the average value of a column



BINARY_CHECKSUM


 

CHECKSUM


 

CHECKSUM_AGG


 

COUNT(column)



Returns the number of rows (without a NULL value) of a column



COUNT(*)



Returns the number of selected rows



COUNT(DISTINCT column)



Returns the number of distinct results



FIRST(column)



Returns the value of the first record in a specified field (not supported in SQLServer2K)



LAST(column)



Returns the value of the last record in a specified field (not supported in SQLServer2K)



MAX(column)



Returns the highest value of a column



MIN(column)



Returns the lowest value of a column



STDEV(column)


 

STDEVP(column)


 

SUM(column)



Returns the total sum of a column



VAR(column)


 

VARP(column)


 





Scalar functions



Scalar functions operate against a single value, and return a single value based on the input value.



Useful Scalar Functions in MS Access

















































































Function



Description



UCASE(c)



Converts a field to upper case



LCASE(c)



Converts a field to lower case



MID(c,start[,end])



Extract characters from a text field



LEN(c)



Returns the length of a text field



INSTR(c)



Returns the numeric position of a named character within a text field



LEFT(c,number_of_char)



Return the left part of a text field requested



RIGHT(c,number_of_char)



Return the right part of a text field requested



ROUND(c,decimals)



Rounds a numeric field to the number of decimals specified



MOD(x,y)



Returns the remainder of a division operation



NOW()



Returns the current system date



FORMAT(c,format)



Changes the way a field is displayed



DATEDIFF(d,date1,date2)



Used to perform date calculations







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SQL GROUP BY and HAVING



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Aggregate functions (like SUM) often need an added GROUP BY functionality.






GROUP BY...



GROUP BY... was added to SQL because aggregate functions (like SUM) return the aggregate of all column values every time they are called, and without the GROUP BY function it was impossible to find the sum for each individual group of column values.



The syntax for the GROUP BY function is:






SELECT column,SUM(column) FROM table GROUP BY column







GROUP BY Example



This "Sales" Table:


























Company



Amount



W3Schools



5500



IBM



4500



W3Schools



7100





And This SQL:






SELECT Company, SUM(Amount) FROM Sales




Returns this result:


























Company



SUM(Amount)



W3Schools



17100



IBM



17100



W3Schools



17100





The above code is invalid because the column returned is not part of an aggregate. A GROUP BY clause will solve this problem:






SELECT Company,SUM(Amount) FROM Sales


GROUP BY Company




Returns this result:




















Company



SUM(Amount)



W3Schools



12600



IBM



4500








HAVING...



HAVING... was added to SQL because the WHERE keyword could not be used against aggregate functions (like SUM), and without HAVING... it would be impossible to test for result conditions.



The syntax for the HAVING function is:






SELECT column,SUM(column) FROM table


GROUP BY column


HAVING SUM(column) condition value




This "Sales" Table:


























Company



Amount



W3Schools



5500



IBM



4500



W3Schools



7100





This SQL:






SELECT Company,SUM(Amount) FROM Sales


GROUP BY Company


HAVING SUM(Amount)>10000




Returns this result














Company



SUM(Amount)



W3Schools



12600








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SQL SELECT INTO Statement



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The SELECT INTO Statement



The SELECT INTO statement is most often used to create backup copies of tables or for archiving records.



Syntax







SELECT column_name(s) INTO newtable [IN externaldatabase] 


FROM source






Make a Backup Copy



The following example makes a backup copy of the "Persons" table:






SELECT * INTO Persons_backup


FROM Persons




The IN clause can be used to copy tables into another database:






SELECT Persons.* INTO Persons IN 'Backup.mdb'


FROM Persons




If you only want to copy a few fields, you can do so by listing them after the SELECT statement:






SELECT LastName,FirstName INTO Persons_backup


FROM Persons




You can also add a WHERE clause. The following example creates a "Persons_backup" table with two columns (FirstName and LastName) by extracting the persons who lives in "Sandnes" from the "Persons" table:






SELECT LastName,Firstname INTO Persons_backup


FROM Persons


WHERE City='Sandnes'




Selecting data from more than one table is also possible. The following example creates a new table "Empl_Ord_backup" that contains data from the two tables Employees and Orders:






SELECT Employees.Name,Orders.Product


INTO Empl_Ord_backup


FROM Employees


INNER JOIN Orders


ON Employees.Employee_ID=Orders.Employee_ID









SQL CREATE VIEW Statement



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A view is a virtual table based on the result-set of a SELECT statement.






What is a View?



In SQL, a VIEW is a virtual table based on the result-set of a SELECT statement.



A view contains rows and columns, just like a real table. The fields in a view are fields from one or more real tables in the database. You can add SQL functions, WHERE, and JOIN statements to a view and present the data as if the data were coming from a single table.



Note: The database design and structure will NOT be affected by the functions, where, or join statements in a view.



Syntax







CREATE VIEW view_name AS


SELECT column_name(s)


FROM table_name


WHERE condition



Note: The database does not store the view data! The database engine recreates the data, using the view's SELECT statement, every time a user queries a view.






Using Views



A view could be used from inside a query, a stored procedure, or from inside another view. By adding functions, joins, etc., to a view, it allows you to present exactly the data you want to the user.



The sample database Northwind has some views installed by default. The view "Current Product List" lists all active products (products that are not discontinued) from the Products table. The view is created with the following SQL:






CREATE VIEW [Current Product List] AS


SELECT ProductID,ProductName


FROM Products


WHERE Discontinued=No




We can query the view above as follows:






SELECT * FROM [Current Product List]




Another view from the Northwind sample database selects every product in the Products table that has a unit price that is higher than the average unit price:






CREATE VIEW [Products Above Average Price] AS


SELECT ProductName,UnitPrice


FROM Products


WHERE UnitPrice>(SELECT AVG(UnitPrice) FROM Products)




We can query the view above as follows:






SELECT * FROM [Products Above Average Price]




Another example view from the Northwind database calculates the total sale for each category in 1997. Note that this view select its data from another view called "Product Sales for 1997":






CREATE VIEW [Category Sales For 1997] AS


SELECT DISTINCT CategoryName,Sum(ProductSales) AS CategorySales


FROM [Product Sales for 1997]


GROUP BY CategoryName




We can query the view above as follows:






SELECT * FROM [Category Sales For 1997]




We can also add a condition to the query. Now we want to see the total sale only for the category "Beverages":






SELECT * FROM [Category Sales For 1997]


WHERE CategoryName='Beverages'







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SQL Quick Reference



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SQL Quick Reference from W3Schools. Print it, and fold it in your pocket.






SQL Syntax

















































































































































































Statement



Syntax



AND / OR



SELECT column_name(s)

FROM table_name


WHERE condition


AND|OR condition



ALTER TABLE (add column)



ALTER TABLE table_name

ADD column_name datatype



ALTER TABLE (drop column)



ALTER TABLE table_name

DROP COLUMN column_name



AS (alias for column)



SELECT column_name AS column_alias

FROM table_name



AS (alias for table)



SELECT column_name

FROM table_name  AS table_alias



BETWEEN



SELECT column_name(s)

FROM table_name


WHERE column_name


BETWEEN value1 AND value2



CREATE DATABASE



CREATE DATABASE database_name



CREATE INDEX



CREATE INDEX index_name

ON table_name (column_name)



CREATE TABLE



CREATE TABLE table_name

(


column_name1 data_type,


column_name2 data_type,


.......


)



CREATE UNIQUE INDEX



CREATE UNIQUE INDEX index_name

ON table_name (column_name)



CREATE VIEW



CREATE VIEW view_name AS

SELECT column_name(s)


FROM table_name


WHERE condition



DELETE FROM



DELETE FROM table_name

(Note: Deletes the entire table!!)



or



DELETE FROM table_name

WHERE condition



DROP DATABASE



DROP DATABASE database_name



DROP INDEX



DROP INDEX table_name.index_name



DROP TABLE



DROP TABLE table_name



GROUP BY



SELECT column_name1,SUM(column_name2)

FROM table_name


GROUP BY column_name1



HAVING



SELECT column_name1,SUM(column_name2)

FROM table_name


GROUP BY column_name1


HAVING SUM(column_name2) condition value



IN



SELECT column_name(s)

FROM table_name


WHERE column_name


IN (value1,value2,..)



INSERT INTO



INSERT INTO table_name

VALUES (value1, value2,....)



or



INSERT INTO table_name

(column_name1, column_name2,...)


VALUES (value1, value2,....)



LIKE



SELECT column_name(s)

FROM table_name


WHERE column_name


LIKE pattern



ORDER BY



SELECT column_name(s)

FROM table_name


ORDER BY column_name [ASC|DESC]



SELECT



SELECT column_name(s)

FROM table_name



SELECT *



SELECT *

FROM table_name



SELECT DISTINCT



SELECT DISTINCT column_name(s)

FROM table_name



SELECT INTO

(used to create backup copies of tables)



SELECT *

INTO new_table_name


FROM original_table_name



or



SELECT column_name(s)

INTO new_table_name


FROM original_table_name



TRUNCATE TABLE

(deletes only the data inside the table)



TRUNCATE TABLE table_name



UPDATE



UPDATE table_name

SET column_name=new_value


[, column_name=new_value]


WHERE column_name=some_value



WHERE



SELECT column_name(s)

FROM table_name


WHERE condition


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aditya55 said...

SQL Aliases

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