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Chap 2

The document discusses restricting and sorting data in SQL queries. It covers limiting rows using selection criteria like the WHERE clause, comparison operators like BETWEEN and IN, logical operators like AND and OR, and precedence rules when combining conditions. Examples are provided for each concept.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
14 views27 pages

Chap 2

The document discusses restricting and sorting data in SQL queries. It covers limiting rows using selection criteria like the WHERE clause, comparison operators like BETWEEN and IN, logical operators like AND and OR, and precedence rules when combining conditions. Examples are provided for each concept.

Uploaded by

Usama Kayani
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PPT, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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2

Restricting and Sorting Data

Copyright  Oracle Corporation, 1998. All rights reserved.


Objectives

After completing this lesson, you should


be able to do the following:
• Limit the rows retrieved by a query
• Sort the rows retrieved by a query

2-2 Copyright  Oracle Corporation, 1998. All rights reserved.


Limiting Rows Using a Selection
EMP
EMPNO ENAME JOB ... DEPTNO
"…retrieve all
7839 KING PRESIDENT 10 employees
7698 BLAKE MANAGER 30 in department 10"
7782 CLARK MANAGER 10
7566 JONES MANAGER 20
...

EMP
EMPNO ENAME JOB ... DEPTNO

7839 KING PRESIDENT 10


7782 CLARK MANAGER 10
7934 MILLER CLERK 10

2-3 Copyright  Oracle Corporation, 1998. All rights reserved.


Limiting Rows Selected
• Restrict the rows returned by using the
WHERE clause.

SELECT [DISTINCT] {*| column [alias], ...}


FROM table
[WHERE condition(s)];

• The WHERE clause follows the FROM


clause.

2-4 Copyright  Oracle Corporation, 1998. All rights reserved.


Using the WHERE Clause

SQL> SELECT ename, job, deptno


2 FROM emp
3 WHERE job='CLERK';

ENAME JOB DEPTNO


---------- --------- ---------
JAMES CLERK 30
SMITH CLERK 20
ADAMS CLERK 20
MILLER CLERK 10

2-5 Copyright  Oracle Corporation, 1998. All rights reserved.


Character Strings and Dates
• Character strings and date values are
enclosed in single quotation marks.
• Character values are case sensitive and
date values are format sensitive.
• The default date format is DD-MON-YY.

SQL> SELECT ename, job, deptno


2 FROM emp
3 WHERE ename = 'JAMES';

2-6 Copyright  Oracle Corporation, 1998. All rights reserved.


Comparison Operators

Operator Meaning

= Equal to

> Greater than

>= Greater than or equal to

< Less than

<= Less than or equal to

<> Not equal to

2-7 Copyright  Oracle Corporation, 1998. All rights reserved.


Using the Comparison
Operators

SQL> SELECT ename, sal, comm


2 FROM emp
3 WHERE sal<=comm;

ENAME SAL COMM


---------- --------- ---------
MARTIN 1250 1400

2-8 Copyright  Oracle Corporation, 1998. All rights reserved.


Other Comparison Operators

Operator Meaning

BETWEEN Between two values (inclusive)


...AND...

IN(list) Match any of a list of values

LIKE Match a character pattern

IS NULL Is a null value

2-9 Copyright  Oracle Corporation, 1998. All rights reserved.


Using the BETWEEN Operator
Use the BETWEEN operator to display
rows based on a range of values.
SQL> SELECT ename, sal
2 FROM emp
3 WHERE sal BETWEEN 1000 AND 1500;

ENAME SAL
---------- --------- Lower Higher
MARTIN 1250 limit limit
TURNER 1500
WARD 1250
ADAMS 1100
MILLER 1300

2-10 Copyright  Oracle Corporation, 1998. All rights reserved.


Using the IN Operator
Use the IN operator to test for values in a
list.

SQL> SELECT empno, ename, sal, mgr


2 FROM emp
3 WHERE mgr IN (7902, 7566, 7788);

EMPNO ENAME SAL MGR


--------- ---------- --------- ---------
7902 FORD 3000 7566
7369 SMITH 800 7902
7788 SCOTT 3000 7566
7876 ADAMS 1100 7788

2-11 Copyright  Oracle Corporation, 1998. All rights reserved.


Using the LIKE Operator
• Use the LIKE operator to perform
wildcard searches of valid search string
values.
• Search conditions can contain either
literal characters or numbers.
– % denotes zero or many characters.
– _ denotes one character.

SQL> SELECT ename


2 FROM emp
3 WHERE ename LIKE 'S%';

2-12 Copyright  Oracle Corporation, 1998. All rights reserved.


Using the LIKE Operator

• You can combine pattern-matching


characters.
SQL> SELECT ename
2 FROM emp
3 WHERE ename LIKE '_A%';

ENAME
----------
MARTIN
JAMES
WARD
• You can use the ESCAPE identifier to
search for "%" or "_".
2-13 Copyright  Oracle Corporation, 1998. All rights reserved.
Using the IS NULL Operator

Test for null values with the IS NULL


operator.

SQL> SELECT ename, mgr


2 FROM emp
3 WHERE mgr IS NULL;

ENAME MGR
---------- ---------
KING

2-14 Copyright  Oracle Corporation, 1998. All rights reserved.


Logical Operators

Operator Meaning

AND Returns TRUE if both component


conditions are TRUE
OR Returns TRUE if either component
condition is TRUE

NOT Returns TRUE if the following


condition is FALSE

2-15 Copyright  Oracle Corporation, 1998. All rights reserved.


Using the AND Operator
AND requires both conditions to be TRUE.

SQL> SELECT empno, ename, job, sal


2 FROM emp
3 WHERE sal>=1100
4 AND job='CLERK';

EMPNO ENAME JOB SAL


--------- ---------- --------- ---------
7876 ADAMS CLERK 1100
7934 MILLER CLERK 1300

2-16 Copyright  Oracle Corporation, 1998. All rights reserved.


Using the OR Operator
OR requires either condition to be TRUE.
SQL> SELECT empno, ename, job, sal
2 FROM emp
3 WHERE sal>=1100
4 OR job='CLERK';

EMPNO ENAME JOB SAL


--------- ---------- --------- ---------
7839 KING PRESIDENT 5000
7698 BLAKE MANAGER 2850
7782 CLARK MANAGER 2450
7566 JONES MANAGER 2975
7654 MARTIN SALESMAN 1250
...
7900 JAMES CLERK 950
...
14 rows selected.
2-17 Copyright  Oracle Corporation, 1998. All rights reserved.
Using the NOT Operator

SQL> SELECT ename, job


2 FROM emp
3 WHERE job NOT IN ('CLERK','MANAGER','ANALYST');

ENAME JOB
---------- ---------
KING PRESIDENT
MARTIN SALESMAN
ALLEN SALESMAN
TURNER SALESMAN
WARD SALESMAN

2-18 Copyright  Oracle Corporation, 1998. All rights reserved.


Rules of Precedence

Order Evaluated Operator


1 All comparison
operators
2 NOT
3 AND
4 OR

Override rules of precedence by using


parentheses.

2-19 Copyright  Oracle Corporation, 1998. All rights reserved.


Rules of Precedence
SQL> SELECT ename, job, sal
2 FROM emp
3 WHERE job='SALESMAN'
4 OR job='PRESIDENT'
5 AND sal>1500;

ENAME JOB SAL


---------- --------- ---------
KING PRESIDENT 5000
MARTIN SALESMAN 1250
ALLEN SALESMAN 1600
TURNER SALESMAN 1500
WARD SALESMAN 1250

2-20 Copyright  Oracle Corporation, 1998. All rights reserved.


Rules of Precedence
Use parentheses to force priority.
SQL> SELECT ename, job, sal
2 FROM emp
3 WHERE (job='SALESMAN'
4 OR job='PRESIDENT')
5 AND sal>1500;

ENAME JOB SAL


---------- --------- ---------
KING PRESIDENT 5000
ALLEN SALESMAN 1600

2-21 Copyright  Oracle Corporation, 1998. All rights reserved.


ORDER BY Clause
• Sort rows with the ORDER BY clause
– ASC: ascending order, default
– DESC: descending order
• The ORDER BY clause comes last in the
SELECT statement.
SQL> SELECT ename, job, deptno, hiredate
2 FROM emp
3 ORDER BY hiredate;

ENAME JOB DEPTNO HIREDATE


---------- --------- --------- ---------
SMITH CLERK 20 17-DEC-80
ALLEN SALESMAN 30 20-FEB-81
...
14 rows selected.
2-22 Copyright  Oracle Corporation, 1998. All rights reserved.
Sorting in Descending Order
SQL> SELECT ename, job, deptno, hiredate
2 FROM emp
3 ORDER BY hiredate DESC;

ENAME JOB DEPTNO HIREDATE


---------- --------- --------- ---------
ADAMS CLERK 20 12-JAN-83
SCOTT ANALYST 20 09-DEC-82
MILLER CLERK 10 23-JAN-82
JAMES CLERK 30 03-DEC-81
FORD ANALYST 20 03-DEC-81
KING PRESIDENT 10 17-NOV-81
MARTIN SALESMAN 30 28-SEP-81
...
14 rows selected.

2-23 Copyright  Oracle Corporation, 1998. All rights reserved.


Sorting by Column Alias
SQL> SELECT empno, ename, sal*12 annsal
2 FROM emp
3 ORDER BY annsal;

EMPNO ENAME ANNSAL


--------- ---------- ---------
7369 SMITH 9600
7900 JAMES 11400
7876 ADAMS 13200
7654 MARTIN 15000
7521 WARD 15000
7934 MILLER 15600
7844 TURNER 18000
...
14 rows selected.

2-24 Copyright  Oracle Corporation, 1998. All rights reserved.


Sorting by Multiple Columns
• The order of ORDER BY list is the order of
sort.
SQL> SELECT ename, deptno, sal
2 FROM emp
3 ORDER BY deptno, sal DESC;

ENAME DEPTNO SAL


---------- --------- ---------
KING 10 5000
CLARK 10 2450
MILLER 10 1300
FORD 20 3000
...
14 rows selected.

• You can sort by a column that is not in the


SELECT list.
2-25 Copyright  Oracle Corporation, 1998. All rights reserved.
Summary

SELECT [DISTINCT] {*| column [alias], ...}


FROM table
[WHERE condition(s)]
[ORDER BY {column, expr, alias} [ASC|DESC]];

2-26 Copyright  Oracle Corporation, 1998. All rights reserved.


Practice Overview
• Selecting data and changing the order of rows displayed
• Restricting rows by using the WHERE clause
• Using the double quotation marks in column aliases

2-27 Copyright  Oracle Corporation, 1998. All rights reserved.

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