04 SQLQueries
04 SQLQueries
Reserves
Example Instances
Sailors We will use these instances of the Sailors and Reserves relations in our examples. If the key for the Reserves relation Boats contained only the attributes sid and bid, how would the semantics differ?
sid 22 31 58
bid 101 102 103 104
relation-list qualification
[DISTINCT] target-list
relation-list A list of relation names (possibly with a range-variable after each name). target-list A list of attributes of relations in relation-list qualification Comparisons (Attr op const or Attr1 op Attr2, where op is one of , , , , , ) combined using AND, OR and NOT. DISTINCT is an optional keyword indicating that the answer should not contain duplicates. Default is that duplicates are not eliminated!
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Semantics of an SQL query defined in terms of the following conceptual evaluation strategy:
Compute the cross-product of relation-list. Discard resulting tuples if they fail qualifications. Delete attributes that are not in target-list. If DISTINCT is specified, eliminate duplicate rows.
This strategy is probably the least efficient way to compute a query! An optimizer will find more efficient strategies to compute the same answers.
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(sid) sname rating age 22 dustin 22 dustin 31 lubber 31 lubber 58 rusty 58 rusty
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(sid) bid day 22 58 22 58 22 58 101 10/10/96 103 11/12/96 101 10/10/96 103 11/12/96 101 10/10/96 103 11/12/96
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7 7 8 8 10 10
Really needed only if the same relation appears twice in the FROM clause. The previous query can also be written as:
SELECT S.sname FROM Sailors S, Reserves R WHERE S.sid=R.sid AND bid=103
OR
Would adding DISTINCT to this query make a difference? What is the effect of replacing S.sid by S.sname in the SELECT clause? Would adding DISTINCT to this variant of the query make a difference?
Illustrates use of arithmetic expressions and string pattern matching: Find triples (of ages of sailors and two fields defined by expressions) for sailors whose names begin and end with B and contain at least three characters. AS and = are two ways to name fields in result. LIKE is used for string matching. `_ stands for any one character and `% stands for 0 or more arbitrary characters.
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compute the union of any two union-compatible sets of tuples (which are themselves the result of SQL queries). If we replace OR by AND in the first version, what do we get? Also available: EXCEPT (What do we get if we replace UNION by EXCEPT?)
SELECT R.sid FROM Boats B, Reserves R WHERE R.bid=B.bid AND (B.color=red OR B.color=green)
SELECT R.sid FROM Boats B, Reserves R WHERE R.bid=B.bid AND B.color=red UNION SELECT R.sid FROM Boats B, Reserves R WHERE R.bid=B.bid AND B.color=green
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compute the intersection of any two unioncompatible sets of tuples. (Included in the SQL/92 standard, but some systems dont support it.) Contrast symmetry of the UNION and INTERSECT queries with how much the other versions differ.
Key field! SELECT R.sid FROM Boats B, Reserves R WHERE R.bid=B.bid AND B.color=red INTERSECT SELECT R.sid FROM Boats B, Reserves R WHERE R.bid=B.bid AND B.color=green
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Nested Queries
Find names of sailors whove reserved boat #103:
SELECT S.sname FROM Sailors S WHERE S.sid IN (SELECT R.sid FROM Reserves R WHERE R.bid=103)
A very powerful feature of SQL: a WHERE clause can itself contain an SQL query! (Actually, so can FROM and HAVING clauses.) To find sailors whove not reserved #103, use NOT IN. To understand semantics of nested queries, think of a nested loops evaluation: For each Sailors tuple, check the qualification by computing the subquery.
How about if we change the query to be: Find names of sailors whove not reserved a red boat
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NOT IN
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EXISTS is another set comparison operator, like IN; it checks for empty set.
Illustrates why, in general, subquery must be re-computed for each Sailors tuple. UNIQUE checks for duplicate tuples (returns true if there are no duplicate tuples or it is empty) If UNIQUE is used (instead of EXISTS), and * is replaced by R.bid, finds sailors with at most one reservation for boat #103. (* denotes all attributes; Why do we have to replace * by R.bid?)
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SELECT * FROM Sailors S WHERE S.rating > ANY (SELECT S2.rating FROM Sailors S2 WHERE S2.sname=Horatio)
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(1)
Division in SQL
Find sailors whove reserved all boats.
SELECT S.sname FROM Sailors S WHERE NOT EXISTS ((SELECT B.bid FROM Boats B) EXCEPT (SELECT R.bid FROM Reserves R WHERE R.sid=S.sid))
WHERE NOT EXISTS (SELECT B.bid FROM Boats B WHERE NOT EXISTS (SELECT R.bid Sailors S such that ... FROM Reserves R WHERE R.bid=B.bid there is no boat B without ... AND R.sid=S.sid))
Aggregate Operators
COUNT (*) COUNT ( [DISTINCT] A) SUM ( [DISTINCT] A) AVG ( [DISTINCT] A) MAX (A) MIN (A)
SELECT COUNT (*) FROM Sailors S SELECT AVG (S.age) FROM Sailors S WHERE S.rating=10
single column
SELECT S.sname FROM Sailors S WHERE S.rating= (SELECT MAX(S2.rating) FROM Sailors S2)
SELECT S.sname, MAX (S.age) FROM Sailors S SELECT S.sname, S.age FROM Sailors S WHERE S.age = (SELECT MAX (S2.age) FROM Sailors S2) SELECT S.sname, S.age FROM Sailors S WHERE (SELECT MAX (S2.age) FROM Sailors S2)
= S.age
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In general, we dont know how many rating levels exist, and what the rating values for these levels are! Suppose we know that rating values go from 1 to 10; we can write 10 queries that look like this (!): For i = 1, 2, ... , 10: SELECT MIN (S.age) FROM Sailors S WHERE S.rating = i
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[DISTINCT] target-list
The target-list contains (i) attribute names (ii) terms with aggregate operations (e.g., MIN (S.age)).
The attribute list (i) must be a subset of grouping-list. Intuitively, each answer tuple corresponds to a group, and these attributes must have a single value per group. (A group is a set of tuples that have the same value for all attributes in grouping-list.)
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Conceptual Evaluation
The cross-product of relation-list is computed, tuples that fail qualification are discarded, `unnecessary fields are deleted, and the remaining tuples are partitioned into groups by the value of attributes in grouping-list. The group-qualification is then applied to eliminate some groups. Expressions in group-qualification must have a single value per group!
In effect, an attribute in group-qualification that is not an argument of an aggregate op also appears in grouping-list. (SQL does not exploit primary key semantics here!)
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Find the age of the youngest sailor with age 18, for each rating with at least 2 such sailors
SELECT S.rating, MIN (S.age) FROM Sailors S WHERE S.age >= 18 GROUP BY S.rating HAVING COUNT (*) > 1
Only S.rating and S.age are mentioned in the SELECT, GROUP BY or HAVING clauses; other attributes `unnecessary. 2nd column of result is unnamed. (Use AS to name it.)
sid sname rating age 22 dustin 7 45.0 31 lubber 8 55.5 71 zorba 10 16.0 64 horatio 7 35.0 29 brutus 1 33.0 58 rusty 10 35.0 rating age 1 33.0 7 45.0 rating 7 35.0 7 35.0 8 55.5 Answer relation 10 35.0
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Find the age of the youngest sailor with age > 18, for each rating with at least 2 sailors (of any age)
SELECT S.rating, MIN (S.age) FROM Sailors S WHERE S.age > 18 GROUP BY S.rating HAVING 1 < (SELECT COUNT (*) FROM Sailors S2 WHERE S.rating=S2.rating)
Shows HAVING clause can also contain a subquery. Compare this with the query where we considered only ratings with 2 sailors over 18! What if HAVING clause is replaced by:
For each red boat, find the number of reservations for this boat
SELECT B.bid, COUNT (*) AS num_of_reservations FROM Boats B, Reserves R WHERE R.bid=B.bid AND B.color=red GROUP BY B.bid
Grouping over a join of two relations. What do we get if we remove B.color=red from the WHERE clause and add a HAVING clause with this condition?
Only columns that appear in GROUP BY can appear in HAVING, unless they appear as arguments to an aggregate operator in the HAVING clause
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Find those ratings for which the average age is the minimum over all ratings
SELECT S.rating FROM Sailors S WHERE S.age = (SELECT MIN (AVG (S2.age)) FROM Sailors S2 GROUP BY S2.rating) Correct solution (in SQL/92): SELECT Temp.rating, Temp.avg_age FROM (SELECT S.rating, AVG (S.age) AS avg_age FROM Sailors S GROUP BY S.rating) AS Temp WHERE Temp.avg_age = (SELECT MIN (Temp.avg_age) FROM Temp)
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Null Values
Field values in a tuple are sometimes unknown (e.g., a rating has not been assigned) or inapplicable (e.g., no spouses name).
SQL provides a special value null for such situations. Special operators needed to check if value is/is not null. Is rating>8 true or false when rating is equal to null? What about AND, OR and NOT connectives? We need a 3-valued logic (true, false and unknown). Meaning of constructs must be defined carefully. (e.g., WHERE clause eliminates rows that dont evaluate to true.) New operators (in particular, outer joins) possible/needed.
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Outer Joins
Left Outer Join: rows in the left table that do not mach some row in the right table appear exactly once, with column from the right table assigned NULL values. Right Outer Join: the reverse Outer Join: both, left and right sid bid 101 null 103
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SELECT S.sid, R.bid FROM Saliors S NATURAL LEFT OUTER JOIN Reserves R
22 31 58
Inserts/deletes/updates that violate ICs are disallowed. Can be used to ensure application semantics (e.g., sid is a key), or prevent inconsistencies (e.g., sname has to be a string, age must be < 200)
Types of ICs: Domain constraints, primary key constraints, foreign key constraints, general constraints.
CREATE TABLE Sailors ( sid INTEGER, sname CHAR(10), rating INTEGER, age REAL, Useful when PRIMARY KEY (sid), more general CHECK ( rating >= 1 ICs than keys AND rating <= 10 ) are involved. CREATE TABLE Reserves Can use queries ( sname CHAR(10), to express bid INTEGER, constraint. day DATE, Constraints can PRIMARY KEY (bid,day), be named. CONSTRAINT noInterlakeRes CHECK (`Interlake <> Required to hold ( SELECT B.bname on nonempty FROM Boats B tables only. WHERE B.bid=bid)))
General Constraints
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ASSERTION is the
CREATE ASSERTION smallClub right solution; CHECK not associated with either table. ( (SELECT COUNT (S.sid) FROM Sailors S) + (SELECT COUNT (B.bid) FROM Boats B) < 100
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Triggers
Trigger: procedure that starts automatically if specified changes occur to the DBMS Three parts:
Event (activates the trigger) Condition (tests whether the triggers should run) Action (what happens if the trigger runs)
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Triggers Issues
Before (a change occurs) vs after When a statement triggers an event, execution of the triggers action may occur in one of the following fashion
Transactions
Part of the statement vs independent action
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Triggers Example
CREATE TRIGGER init_count BEFORE INSERT ON Students DECLARE count INTEGER; BEGIN count := 0 END CREATE TRIGGER incr_count AFTER INSERT ON Students WHEN (new.age < 18) /* also, old (before value) */ FOR EACH ROW BEGIN count := count + 1; END
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Summary
SQL was an important factor in the early acceptance of the relational model; more natural than earlier, procedural query languages. Relationally complete; in fact, significantly more expressive power than relational algebra. Even queries that can be expressed in RA can often be expressed more naturally in SQL. Many alternative ways to write a query; optimizer should look for most efficient evaluation plan.
In practice, users need to be aware of how queries are optimized and evaluated for best results.
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Summary (Contd.)
NULL for unknown field values brings many complications SQL allows specification of rich integrity constraints Triggers respond to changes in the database
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