SQL Solved Questions (Imp.)
SQL Solved Questions (Imp.)
ROWID
AAASnBAAEAAACrWAAB
AAASnBAAEAAACrWAAD
AAASnBAAEAAACrWAAE
AAASnBAAEAAACrWAAG
STEP-3: Delete the records from the source table using the ROWID values fetched in
previous step
Query:
DELETE FROM EMP WHERE ROWID IN (
SELECT ROWID FROM(
SELECT ROWID,
ROW_NUMBER() OVER(PARTITION BY EMPLOYEE_ID,NAME,SALARY ORDER BY
EMPLOYEE_ID) AS ROW_NUMBER
FROM EMPLOYEE)
WHERE ROW_NUMBER > 1);
Result:
The table EMPLOYEE will have below records after deleting the duplicates
ROWID EMPLOYEE_ID NAME SALARY
AAASnBAAEAAACrWAA
100 Jennifer 4400
A
AAASnBAAEAAACrWAA
101 Michael 13000
C
AAASnBAAEAAACrWAA
102 Pat 6000
F
AAASnBAAEAAACrWAA
103 Den 11000
H
METHOD-2: Using ROWID and Correlated subquery
Correlated subquery is used for row-by-row processing. With a normal nested
subquery, the inner SELECT query runs once and executes first. The returning
values will be used by the main query. A correlated subquery, however,
executes once for every row of the outer query. In other words, the inner
query is driven by the outer query.
In the below query, we are comparing the ROWIDs’ of the unique set of records and
keeping the record with MIN ROWID and deleting all other rows.
Query:
DELETE FROM EMPLOYEE A WHERE ROWID > (SELECT MIN(ROWID) FROM EMPLOYEE B WHERE
B.EMPLOYEE_ID = A.EMPLOYEE_ID );
Result:
The table EMPLOYEE will have below records after deleting the duplicates
ROWID EMPLOYEE_ID NAME SALARY
AAASnBAAEAAACrWAA
100 Jennifer 4400
A
AAASnBAAEAAACrWAA
101 Michael 13000
C
AAASnBAAEAAACrWAA
102 Pat 6000
F
AAASnBAAEAAACrWAA
103 Den 11000
H
The opposite of above discussed case can be implemented by keeping the record
with MAX ROWID from the unique set of records and delete all other duplicates by
executing below query.
Query:
DELETE FROM EMPLOYEE A WHERE ROWID < (SELECT MAX(ROWID) FROM EMPLOYEE B WHERE
B.EMPLOYEE_ID = A.EMPLOYEE_ID );
Result:
The table EMPLOYEE will have below records after deleting the duplicates
ROWID EMPLOYEE_ID NAME SALARY
AAASnBAAEAAACrWAA
100 Jennifer 4400
A
AAASnBAAEAAACrWAA
101 Michael 13000
C
AAASnBAAEAAACrWAA
102 Pat 6000
F
AAASnBAAEAAACrWAA
103 Den 11000
H
3. How to read TOP 5 records from a
table using a SQL query?
Consider below table DEPARTMENTS as the source data
CREATE TABLE Departments(
Department_ID number,
Department_Name varchar(50)
);
DEPARTMENT_ID DEPARTMENT_NAME
10 Administration
20 Marketing
30 Purchasing
40 Human Resources
50 Shipping
60 IT
70 Public Relations
80 Sales
ROWNUM is a “Pseudocolumn” that assigns a number to each row returned
by a query indicating the order in which Oracle selects the row from a table.
The first row selected has a ROWNUM of 1, the second has 2, and so on.
Query:
SELECT * FROM Departments WHERE ROWNUM <= 5;
Result:
DEPARTMENT_ID DEPARTMENT_NAME
10 Administration
20 Marketing
30 Purchasing
40 Human Resources
50 Shipping
4. How to read LAST 5 records from a
table using a SQL query?
Consider the same DEPARTMENTS table as source discussed in previous
question.
In order to select the last 5 records we need to find (count of total number of
records – 5) which gives the count of records from first to last but 5 records.
Using the MINUS function we can compare all records from DEPARTMENTS
table with records from first to last but 5 from DEPARTMENTS table which give
the last 5 records of the table as result.
MINUS operator is used to return all rows in the first SELECT statement that
are not present in the second SELECT statement.
Query:
SELECT * FROM Departments
MINUS
DEPARTMENT_ID DEPARTMENT_NAME
40 Human Resources
50 Shipping
60 IT
70 Public Relations
80 Sales
5. What is the result of Normal Join,
Left Outer Join, Right Outer Join and
Full Outer Join between the tables A
& B?
Table_A
COL
1
1
0
null
Table_B
COL
1
0
null
null
Normal Join:
Normal Join or Inner Join is the most common type of join. It returns the rows
that are exact match between both the tables.
The following Venn diagram illustrates a Normal join when combining two result
sets:
Query:
SELECT a.COL as A,
b.COL as B
FROM TABLE_A a JOIN TABLE_B b
ON a.COL = b.COL;
Result:
A B
1 1
1 1
0 0
Left Outer Join:
The Left Outer Join returns all the rows from the left table and only the
matching rows from the right table. If there is no matching row found from the
right table, the left outer join will have NULL values for the columns from right
table.
The following Venn diagram illustrates a Left join when combining two result sets:
Query:
SELECT a.COL as A,
b.COL as B
FROM TABLE_A a LEFT OUTER JOIN TABLE_B b
ON a.COL = b.COL;
Result:
A B
1 1
1 1
0 0
NULL NULL
Right Outer Join:
The Right Outer Join returns all the rows from the right table and only the
matching rows from the left table. If there is no matching row found from the
left table, the right outer join will have NULL values for the columns from left
table.
The following Venn diagram illustrates a Right join when combining two result sets:
Query:
SELECT a.COL as A,
b.COL as B
FROM TABLE_A a RIGHT OUTER JOIN TABLE_B b
ON a.COL = b.COL;
Result:
A B
1 1
1 1
0 0
NULL NULL
NULL NULL
Full Outer Join:
The Full Outer Join returns all the rows from both the right table and the left
table. If there is no matching row found, the missing side columns will have
NULL values.
The following Venn diagram illustrates a Full join when combining two result sets:
Query:
SELECT a.COL as A,
b.COL as B
FROM TABLE_A a FULL OUTER JOIN TABLE_B b
ON a.COL = b.COL;
Result:
A B
1 1
1 1
0 0
NULL NULL
NULL NULL
NULL NULL
NOTE: NULL do not match with NULL
6. How to find the employee with
second MAX Salary using a SQL
query?
Consider below EMPLOYEES table as the source data
CREATE TABLE Employees(
EMPLOYEE_ID NUMBER(6,0),
NAME VARCHAR2(20 BYTE),
SALARY NUMBER(8,2)
);
SALARY
11000
The above query only gives the second MAX salary value. In order to fetch the
entire employee record with second MAX salary we need to do a self-join on
Employee table based on Salary value.
Query:
WITH
TEMP AS(
SELECT MAX(salary) AS salary FROM Employees WHERE salary NOT IN (
SELECT MAX(salary) AS salary FROM Employees)
)
SELECT a.* FROM Employees a JOIN TEMP b on a.salary = b.salary
Result:
The approach here is to first list all the records based on Salary in the descending
order with MAX salary on top and MIN salary at bottom. Next, using ROWNUM
select the top 2 records.
Query:
SELECT salary FROM(
SELECT salary FROM Employees ORDER BY salary DESC)
WHERE ROWNUM < 3;
Result:
Salary
13000
11000
STEP-2:
Next find the MAX salary from EMPLOYEE table which is not one of top two salary
values fetched in the earlier step.
Query:
SELECT MAX(salary) as salary FROM Employees WHERE salary NOT IN (
SELECT salary FROM(
SELECT salary FROM Employees ORDER BY salary DESC)
WHERE ROWNUM < 3
);
Result:
SALARY
6000
STEP-3:
In order to fetch the entire employee record with third MAX salary we need to do a
self-join on Employee table based on Salary value.
Query:
WITH
TEMP AS(
SELECT MAX(salary) as salary FROM Employees WHERE salary NOT IN (
SELECT salary FROM(
SELECT salary FROM Employees ORDER BY salary DESC)
WHERE ROWNUM < 3)
)
SELECT a.* FROM Employees a join TEMP b on a.salary = b.salary
Result: