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author | Divay Prakash <divayprakash@users.noreply.github.com> | 2020-01-24 20:02:22 +0530 |
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committer | GitHub <noreply@github.com> | 2020-01-24 20:02:22 +0530 |
commit | 9f41d38cec5fb891c5450a39a440b948eaf913e5 (patch) | |
tree | 82636e5e18ad7df9636d7939e2aa1f6abecf58c9 /sql.html.markdown | |
parent | 7e27297ea555764a5e690f251205d9323b349bb2 (diff) | |
parent | 8e18975548d40ab0de6924ffac38127d7f01fecd (diff) |
Merge branch 'master' into dart-formatting
Diffstat (limited to 'sql.html.markdown')
-rw-r--r-- | sql.html.markdown | 41 |
1 files changed, 23 insertions, 18 deletions
diff --git a/sql.html.markdown b/sql.html.markdown index 2bece208..5edf0f7c 100644 --- a/sql.html.markdown +++ b/sql.html.markdown @@ -9,14 +9,14 @@ Structured Query Language (SQL) is an ISO standard language for creating and wor Implementations typically provide a command line prompt where you can enter the commands shown here interactively, and they also offer a way to execute a series of these commands stored in a script file. (Showing that you’re done with the interactive prompt is a good example of something that isn’t standardized--most SQL implementations support the keywords QUIT, EXIT, or both.) -Several of these sample commands assume that the [MySQL employee sample database](https://dev.mysql.com/doc/employee/en/) available on [github](https://github.com/datacharmer/test_db) has already been loaded. The github files are scripts of commands, similar to the relevant commands below, that create and populate tables of data about a fictional company’s employees. The syntax for running these scripts will depend on the SQL implementation you are using. A utility that you run from the operating system prompt is typical. +Several of these sample commands assume that the [MySQL employee sample database](https://dev.mysql.com/doc/employee/en/) available on [github](https://github.com/datacharmer/test_db) has already been loaded. The github files are scripts of commands, similar to the relevant commands below, that create and populate tables of data about a fictional company’s employees. The syntax for running these scripts will depend on the SQL implementation you are using. A utility that you run from the operating system prompt is typical. ```sql -- Comments start with two hyphens. End each command with a semicolon. -- SQL is not case-sensitive about keywords. The sample commands here --- follow the convention of spelling them in upper-case because it makes +-- follow the convention of spelling them in upper-case because it makes -- it easier to distinguish them from database, table, and column names. -- Create and delete a database. Database and table names are case-sensitive. @@ -26,47 +26,47 @@ DROP DATABASE someDatabase; -- List available databases. SHOW DATABASES; --- Use a particular existing database. +-- Use a particular existing database. USE employees; -- Select all rows and columns from the current database's departments table. --- Default activity is for the interpreter to scroll the results on your screen. +-- Default activity is for the interpreter to scroll the results on your screen. SELECT * FROM departments; --- Retrieve all rows from the departments table, --- but only the dept_no and dept_name columns. +-- Retrieve all rows from the departments table, +-- but only the dept_no and dept_name columns. -- Splitting up commands across lines is OK. SELECT dept_no, dept_name FROM departments; --- Retrieve all departments columns, but just 5 rows. +-- Retrieve all departments columns, but just 5 rows. SELECT * FROM departments LIMIT 5; -- Retrieve dept_name column values from the departments --- table where the dept_name value has the substring 'en'. +-- table where the dept_name value has the substring 'en'. SELECT dept_name FROM departments WHERE dept_name LIKE '%en%'; -- Retrieve all columns from the departments table where the dept_name --- column starts with an 'S' and has exactly 4 characters after it. +-- column starts with an 'S' and has exactly 4 characters after it. SELECT * FROM departments WHERE dept_name LIKE 'S____'; -- Select title values from the titles table but don't show duplicates. SELECT DISTINCT title FROM titles; --- Same as above, but sorted (case-sensitive) by the title values. +-- Same as above, but sorted (case-sensitive) by the title values. SELECT DISTINCT title FROM titles ORDER BY title; -- Show the number of rows in the departments table. SELECT COUNT(*) FROM departments; -- Show the number of rows in the departments table that --- have 'en' as a substring of the dept_name value. +-- have 'en' as a substring of the dept_name value. SELECT COUNT(*) FROM departments WHERE dept_name LIKE '%en%'; --- A JOIN of information from multiple tables: the titles table shows --- who had what job titles, by their employee numbers, from what +-- A JOIN of information from multiple tables: the titles table shows +-- who had what job titles, by their employee numbers, from what -- date to what date. Retrieve this information, but instead of the --- employee number, use the employee number as a cross-reference to +-- employee number, use the employee number as a cross-reference to -- the employees table to get each employee's first and last name -- instead. (And only get 10 rows.) @@ -85,12 +85,12 @@ WHERE TABLE_TYPE='BASE TABLE'; -- for how you specify the columns, such as their datatypes. CREATE TABLE tablename1 (fname VARCHAR(20), lname VARCHAR(20)); --- Insert a row of data into the table tablename1. This assumes that the --- table has been defined to accept these values as appropriate for it. +-- Insert a row of data into the table tablename1. This assumes that the +-- table has been defined to accept these values as appropriate for it. INSERT INTO tablename1 VALUES('Richard','Mutt'); -- In tablename1, change the fname value to 'John' --- for all rows that have an lname value of 'Mutt'. +-- for all rows that have an lname value of 'Mutt'. UPDATE tablename1 SET fname='John' WHERE lname='Mutt'; -- Delete rows from the tablename1 table @@ -100,6 +100,11 @@ DELETE FROM tablename1 WHERE lname like 'M%'; -- Delete all rows from the tablename1 table, leaving the empty table. DELETE FROM tablename1; --- Remove the entire tablename1 table. +-- Remove the entire tablename1 table. DROP TABLE tablename1; ``` + +## Further Reading + +* [Codecademy - SQL](https://www.codecademy.com/learn/learn-sql) A good introduction to SQL in a "learn by doing it" format. +* [Database System Concepts](https://www.db-book.com) book's Chapter 3 - Introduction to SQL has an in depth explanation of SQL concepts. |