SQL
SQL
SQL Introduction
Standard language for querying and manipulating data Structured Query Language Many standards out there: ANSI SQL, SQL92 (a.k.a. SQL2), SQL99 (a.k.a. SQL3), . Vendors support various subsets: watch for fun discussions in class !
SQL
Structured Query Language
SQL (Structured Query Language) is used to modify and access data or information from a storage area called database. SQL stands for Structured Query Language and can be pronounced as SQL or sequel . IBM first developed SQL in 1970s. Also it is an ANSI/ISO standard. It is a Standard Universal Language used by most of the relational database management systems (RDBMS). Some of the RDBMS systems are: Oracle, Microsoft SQL server, Sybase etc.
SQL Commands:
SQL commands are instructions used to communicate with the database to perform specific task that work with data. SQL commands can be used not only for searching the database but also to perform various other functions like, for example, you can create tables, add data to tables, or modify data, drop the table, set permissions for users. SQL commands are grouped into four major categories depending on their functionality:
o o o o Data Definition Language (DDL) Data Manipulation Language (DML) Transaction Control Language (TCL) Data Control Language (DCL)
SQL commands
Few of the SQL commands used in SQL prog.
SELECT Statement, UPDATE Statement, INSERT INTO Statement, WHERE Clause, ORDER BY Clause, GROUP BY Clause, ORDER Clause, GROUP Functions Joins, Views Indexes DELETE Statement ,
Table name
Attribute names
Tables in SQL
Product
PName
Gizmo Powergizmo SingleTouch MultiTouch Tuples or rows
Price
$19.99 $29.99 $149.99 $203.99
Category
Gadgets Gadgets Photography Household
Manufacturer
GizmoWorks GizmoWorks Canon Hitachi
Tables Explained
The schema of a table is the table name and its attributes: Product(PName, Price, Category, Manfacturer)
A key is an attribute whose values are unique; we underline a key Product(PName, Price, Category, Manfacturer)
Tables Explained
A tuple = a record
Restriction: all attributes are of atomic type
SQL Operators
There are two type of Operators, namely Comparison Operators and Logical Operators. These operators are used mainly in the WHERE clause, HAVING clause to filter the data to be selected. Comparison operators are used to compare the column data with specific values in a condition. There are three Logical Operators namely AND, OR and NOT
Operators
Comparison Operators
= Description equal to Logical Operato rs OR Description For the row to be selected at least one of the conditions must be true.
<>, !=
< > >= <=
is not equal to
less than greater than greater than or equal to less than or equal to
AND
For a row to be selected all the specified conditions must be true. For a row to be selected the specified condition must be false.
NOT
IN BETWEEN...AND
IS NULL
SQL ORDER BY
The ORDER BY clause is used in a SELECT statement to sort results either in ascending or descending order. Oracle sorts query results in ascending order by default. SELECT name, salary FROM employee ORDER BY salary; name salary
---------Soumya Ramesh Priya Hrithik Harsha ---------20000 25000 30000 35000 35000
SQL Query
Basic form: (plus many many more bells and whistles) SELECT <attributes> FROM <one or more relations> WHERE <conditions>
Price
$19.99 $29.99 $149.99 $203.99
Category
Gadgets Gadgets Photography Household
Manufacturer
GizmoWorks GizmoWorks Canon Hitachi
selection
Powergizmo
Price
$19.99 $29.99 $149.99 $203.99
Category
Gadgets Gadgets Photography Household
Manufacturer
GizmoWorks GizmoWorks Canon Hitachi
SELECT PName, Price, Manufacturer FROM Product WHERE Price > 100
PName Price $149.99 $203.99 Manufacturer Canon Hitachi
SingleTouch MultiTouch
Notation
Input Schema
SELECT PName, Price, Manufacturer FROM Product WHERE Price > 100
Answer(PName, Price, Manfacturer)
Output Schema
Details
Case insensitive:
Same: SELECT Select select Same: Product product Different: Seattle seattle
Constants:
abc - yes abc - no
Eliminating Duplicates
Category
Gadgets
Photography
Household
Compare to:
Category Gadgets
PName
Price
Category
Manufacturer
Gizmo
Powergizmo SingleTouch MultiTouch
$19.99
$29.99 $149.99 $203.99
Gadgets
Gadgets Photography Household
GizmoWorks
GizmoWorks Canon Hitachi
SELECT DISTINCT category FROM Product ORDER BY category SELECT Category FROM Product ORDER BY PName SELECT DISTINCT category FROM Product ORDER BY PName
? ? ?
Key
Product
PName Gizmo Powergizmo SingleTouch MultiTouch Price $19.99 $29.99 $149.99 $203.99 Category Gadgets Gadgets Photography Household Manufacturer GizmoWorks GizmoWorks Canon Hitachi
Foreign key
Joins
Product (pname, price, category, manufacturer) Company (cname, stockPrice, country) Find all products under $200 manufactured in Japan; return their names and prices. Join between Product and Company SELECT PName, Price FROM Product, Company WHERE Manufacturer=CName AND Country=Japan AND Price <= 200
Joins
Product PName Gizmo Powergizmo SingleTouch MultiTouch Price $19.99 $29.99 $149.99 $203.99 Category Gadgets Gadgets Photography Household Manufacturer GizmoWorks GizmoWorks Canon Hitachi Company
Cname GizmoWorks
Canon Hitachi
StockPrice 25
65 15
Country USA
Japan Japan
SELECT PName, Price FROM Product, Company WHERE Manufacturer=CName AND Country=Japan AND Price <= 200
PName SingleTouch
Price $149.99
More Joins
Product (pname, price, category, manufacturer) Company (cname, stockPrice, country) Find all Chinese companies that manufacture products both in the electronic and toy categories SELECT cname
FROM
WHERE
Unexpected duplicates
Cname GizmoWorks
Canon Hitachi
StockPrice 25
65 15
Country USA
Japan Japan
Country
?? ??
Tuple Variables
Person(pname, address, worksfor) Company(cname, address)
SELECT DISTINCT pname, address FROM Person, Company WHERE worksfor = cname Which address ?
SELECT DISTINCT Person.pname, Company.address FROM Person, Company WHERE Person.worksfor = Company.cname SELECT DISTINCT x.pname, y.address FROM Person AS x, Company AS y WHERE x.worksfor = y.cname
Answer = {} for x1 in R1 do for x2 in R2 do .. for xn in Rn do if Conditions then Answer = Answer {(a1,,ak)} return Answer
An Unintuitive Query
SELECT DISTINCT R.A FROM R, S, T WHERE R.A=S.A OR R.A=T.A What does it compute ? Computes R (S T) But what if S = f ?
SELECT Company.city FROM Company, Product, Purchase WHERE Company.name= Product.maker AND Product.pname = Purchase.product AND Purchase.buyer = Joe Blow
Beware of duplicates !
Removing Duplicates
SELECT DISTINCT Company.city FROM Company WHERE Company.name IN (SELECT Product.maker FROM Purchase , Product WHERE Product.pname=Purchase.product AND Purchase .buyer = Joe Blow); SELECT DISTINCT Company.city FROM Company, Product, Purchase WHERE Company.name= Product.maker AND Product.pname = Purchase.product AND Purchase.buyer = Joe Blow
Correlated Queries
Movie (title, year, director, length) Find movies whose title appears more than once.
correlation
SELECT DISTINCT title FROM Movie AS x WHERE year <> ANY (SELECT year FROM Movie WHERE title = x.title);
Note (1) scope of variables (2) this can still be expressed as single SFW
Aggregation
SELECT avg(price) FROM Product WHERE maker=Toyota SELECT count(*) FROM Product WHERE year > 1995
SQL supports several aggregation operations: sum, count, min, max, avg
Aggregation: Count
COUNT applies to duplicates, unless otherwise stated: SELECT Count(category) FROM Product WHERE year > 1995 We probably want: SELECT Count(DISTINCT category) FROM Product WHERE year > 1995 same as Count(*)
More Examples
Purchase(product, date, price, quantity)
Purchase
Simple Aggregations
Date Price Quantity
Product
Bagel
Banana Banana
10/21
10/3 10/10
1
0.5 1
20
10 10
Bagel
10/25
1.50
20
50 (= 20+30)
1&2. FROM-WHERE-GROUPBY
Product Bagel Bagel Banana Banana Date 10/21 10/25 10/3 10/10 Price 1 1.50 0.5 1 Quantity 20 20 10 10
3. SELECT
Product
Bagel Bagel Banana
Date
10/21 10/25 10/3
Price
1 1.50 0.5
Quantity
20 20 10
Product
Bagel Banana
TotalSales
50 15
Banana
10/10
10
SELECT DISTINCT x.product, (SELECT Sum(y.price*y.quantity) FROM Purchase y WHERE x.product = y.product AND y.date > 10/1/2005) AS TotalSales FROM Purchase x WHERE x.date > 10/1/2005
Another Example
What does it mean ? SELECT product, sum(price * quantity) AS SumSales max(quantity) AS MaxQuantity FROM Purchase GROUP BY product
HAVING Clause
Same query, except that we consider only products that had at least 100 buyers. SELECT product, Sum(price * quantity) FROM Purchase WHERE date > 10/1/2005 GROUP BY product HAVING Sum(quantity) > 30 HAVING clause contains conditions on aggregates.
Advanced SQLizing
1. Getting around INTERSECT and EXCEPT
2. Quantifiers 3. Aggregation v.s. subqueries
SELECT R.A, R.B FROM R WHERE NOT EXISTS(SELECT * FROM S WHERE R.A=S.A and R.B=S.B)
2. Quantifiers
Product ( pname, price, company) Company( cname, city) Find all companies that make some products with price < 100
SELECT DISTINCT Company.cname FROM Company, Product WHERE Company.cname = Product.company and Product.price < 100
Existential: easy !
2. Quantifiers
Product ( pname, price, company) Company( cname, city) Find all companies that make only products with price < 100
same as: Find all companies s.t. all of their products have price < 100
Universal: hard !
2. Quantifiers
1. Find the other companies: i.e. s.t. some product 100
SELECT DISTINCT Company.cname FROM Company WHERE Company.cname IN (SELECT Product.company FROM Product WHERE Produc.price >= 100
2. Find all companies s.t. all their products have price < 100
SELECT DISTINCT Company.cname FROM Company WHERE Company.cname NOT IN (SELECT Product.company FROM Product WHERE Produc.price >= 100
a novice
Two Examples
Store(sid, sname) Product(pid, pname, price, sid)
Find all stores that sell only products with price > 100
same as:
Find all stores s.t. all their products have price > 100)
SELECT Store.name FROM Store, Product WHERE Store.sid = Product.sid GROUP BY Store.sid, Store.name HAVING 100 < min(Product.price)
Why both ?
SELECT Store.name FROM Store Almost equivalent WHERE 100 < ALL (SELECT Product.price FROM product WHERE Store.sid = Product.sid) SELECT Store.name FROM Store WHERE Store.sid NOT IN (SELECT Product.sid FROM Product WHERE Product.price <= 100)
Two Examples
Store(sid, sname) Product(pid, pname, price, sid)
Two Examples
This is easy but doesnt do what we want: SELECT Store.sname, max(Product.price) FROM Store, Product WHERE Store.sid = Product.sid GROUP BY Store.sid, Store.sname Better: SELECT Store.sname, x.pname FROM Store, Product x WHERE Store.sid = x.sid and x.price >= ALL (SELECT y.price FROM Product y WHERE Store.sid = y.sid)
Two Examples
Finally, choose some pid arbitrarily, if there are many with highest price: SELECT Store.sname, max(x.pname) FROM Store, Product x WHERE Store.sid = x.sid and x.price >= ALL (SELECT y.price FROM Product y WHERE Store.sid = y.sid) GROUP BY Store.sname
NULLS in SQL
Whenever we dont have a value, we can put a NULL Can mean many things:
Value does not exists Value exists but is unknown Value not applicable Etc.
The schema specifies for each attribute if can be null (nullable attribute) or not How does SQL cope with tables that have NULLs ?
Null Values
If x= NULL then 4*(3-x)/7 is still NULL
If x= NULL then x=Joe is UNKNOWN In SQL there are three boolean values:
FALSE UNKNOWN TRUE = = = 0 0.5 1
Null Values
C1 AND C2 = min(C1, C2) C1 OR C2 = max(C1, C2) NOT C1 = 1 C1
SELECT * FROM Person WHERE (age < 25) AND (height > 6 OR weight > 190) Rule in SQL: include only tuples that yield TRUE
Null Values
Unexpected behavior:
SELECT * FROM Person WHERE age < 25 OR age >= 25 Some Persons are not included !
Null Values
Can test for NULL explicitly:
x IS NULL x IS NOT NULL
SELECT * FROM Person WHERE age < 25 OR age >= 25 OR age IS NULL
Now it includes all Persons
Outerjoins
Explicit joins in SQL = inner joins: Product(name, category) Purchase(prodName, store)
SELECT Product.name, Purchase.store FROM Product, Purchase WHERE Product.name = Purchase.prodName But Products that never sold will be lost !
Outerjoins
Left outer joins in SQL: Product(name, category) Purchase(prodName, store)
SELECT Product.name, Purchase.store FROM Product LEFT OUTER JOIN Purchase ON Product.name = Purchase.prodName
Product
Name Gizmo Camera OneClick Category gadget Photo Photo Name Gizmo Camera Camera OneClick
Purchase
ProdName Gizmo Camera Camera Store Wiz Ritz Wiz NULL Store Wiz Ritz Wiz
Application
Compute, for each product, the total number of sales in September Product(name, category) Purchase(prodName, month, store) SELECT Product.name, count(*) FROM Product, Purchase WHERE Product.name = Purchase.prodName and Purchase.month = September GROUP BY Product.name
Whats wrong ?
Application
Compute, for each product, the total number of sales in September Product(name, category) Purchase(prodName, month, store)
SELECT Product.name, count(*) FROM Product LEFT OUTER JOIN Purchase ON Product.name = Purchase.prodName and Purchase.month = September GROUP BY Product.name Now we also get the products who sold in 0 quantity
Outer Joins
Left outer join:
Include the left tuple even if theres no match
Insertions
General form: INSERT INTO R(A1,., An) VALUES (v1,., vn)
Example: Insert a new purchase to the database: INSERT INTO Purchase(buyer, seller, product, store) VALUES (Joe, Fred, wakeup-clock-espresso-machine, The Sharper Image) Missing attribute NULL. May drop attribute names if give them in order.
Insertions
INSERT INTO PRODUCT(name) SELECT DISTINCT Purchase.product FROM Purchase WHERE Purchase.date > 10/26/01
The query replaces the VALUES keyword. Here we insert many tuples into PRODUCT
Insertion: an Example
Product(name, listPrice, category) Purchase(prodName, buyerName, price) prodName is foreign key in Product.name
Purchase
prodName buyerName John Smith Smith price 200 80 225
listPrice
100
category
gadgets
Insertion: an Example
INSERT INTO Product(name)
SELECT DISTINCT prodName FROM Purchase WHERE prodName NOT IN (SELECT name FROM Product)
listPrice 100 -
category Gadgets -
Insertion: an Example
INSERT INTO Product(name, listPrice)
SELECT DISTINCT prodName, price FROM Purchase WHERE prodName NOT IN (SELECT name FROM Product)
name gizmo camera listPrice 100 200 category Gadgets -
camera ??
225 ??
Deletions
Example: DELETE FROM WHERE PURCHASE
Updates
Example: UPDATE PRODUCT SET price = price/2 WHERE Product.name IN (SELECT product FROM Purchase WHERE Date =Oct, 25, 1999);