Teach Yourself SQL in 21 Days, Second Edition

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- Day 3 -
Expressions, Conditions, and Operators

Objectives

On Day 2, "Introduction to the Query: The SELECT Statement," you used SELECT and FROM to manipulate data in interesting (and useful) ways. Today you learn more about SELECT and FROM and expand the basic query with some new terms to go with query, table, and row, as well as a new clause and a group of handy items called operators. When the sun sets on Day 3, you will


NOTE: We used Oracle's Personal Oracle7 to generate today's examples. Other implementations of SQL may differ slightly in the way in which commands are entered or output is displayed, but the results are basically the same for all implementations that conform to the ANSI standard.

Expressions

The definition of an expression is simple: An expression returns a value. Expression types are very broad, covering different data types such as String, Numeric, and Boolean. In fact, pretty much anything following a clause (SELECT or FROM, for example) is an expression. In the following example amount is an expression that returns the value contained in the amount column.

SELECT amount FROM checks;

In the following statement NAME, ADDRESS, PHONE and ADDRESSBOOK are expressions:

SELECT NAME, ADDRESS, PHONE
FROM ADDRESSBOOK;

Now, examine the following expression:

WHERE NAME = 'BROWN'

It contains a condition, NAME = 'BROWN', which is an example of a Boolean expression. NAME = 'BROWN' will be either TRUE or FALSE, depending on the condition =.

Conditions

If you ever want to find a particular item or group of items in your database, you need one or more conditions. Conditions are contained in the WHERE clause. In the preceding example, the condition is

NAME = 'BROWN'

To find everyone in your organization who worked more than 100 hours last month, your condition would be

NUMBEROFHOURS > 100

Conditions enable you to make selective queries. In their most common form, conditions comprise a variable, a constant, and a comparison operator. In the first example the variable is NAME, the constant is 'BROWN', and the comparison operator is =. In the second example the variable is NUMBEROFHOURS, the constant is 100, and the comparison operator is >. You need to know about two more elements before you can write conditional queries: the WHERE clause and operators.

The WHERE Clause

The syntax of the WHERE clause is

SYNTAX:
WHERE <SEARCH CONDITION>

SELECT, FROM, and WHERE are the three most frequently used clauses in SQL. WHERE simply causes your queries to be more selective. Without the WHERE clause, the most useful thing you could do with a query is display all records in the selected table(s). For example:

INPUT:
SQL> SELECT * FROM BIKES;

lists all rows of data in the table BIKES.

OUTPUT:
NAME           FRAMESIZE COMPOSITION  MILESRIDDEN TYPE
-------------- --------- ------------ ----------- -------
TREK 2300           22.5 CARBON FIBER        3500 RACING
BURLEY                22 STEEL               2000 TANDEM
GIANT                 19 STEEL               1500 COMMUTER
FUJI                  20 STEEL                500 TOURING
SPECIALIZED           16 STEEL                100 MOUNTAIN
CANNONDALE          22.5 ALUMINUM            3000 RACING
6 rows selected.

If you wanted a particular bike, you could type

INPUT/OUTPUT:
SQL> SELECT *
     FROM BIKES
     WHERE NAME = 'BURLEY';

which would yield only one record:

NAME           FRAMESIZE COMPOSITION    MILESRIDDEN TYPE
-------------- --------- -------------- ----------- -------
BURLEY                22 STEEL                 2000 TANDEM
ANALYSIS:

This simple example shows how you can place a condition on the data that you want to retrieve.

Operators

Operators are the elements you use inside an expression to articulate how you want specified conditions to retrieve data. Operators fall into six groups: arithmetic, comparison, character, logical, set, and miscellaneous.

Arithmetic Operators

The arithmetic operators are plus (+), minus (-), divide (/), multiply (*), and modulo (%). The first four are self-explanatory. Modulo returns the integer remainder of a division. Here are two examples:

5 % 2 = 1
6 % 2 = 0

The modulo operator does not work with data types that have decimals, such as Real or Number.

If you place several of these arithmetic operators in an expression without any parentheses, the operators are resolved in this order: multiplication, division, modulo, addition, and subtraction. For example, the expression

2*6+9/3

equals

12 + 3 = 15

However, the expression

2 * (6 + 9) / 3

equals

2 * 15 / 3 = 10

Watch where you put those parentheses! Sometimes the expression does exactly what you tell it to do, rather than what you want it to do.

The following sections examine the arithmetic operators in some detail and give you a chance to write some queries.

Plus (+)

You can use the plus sign in several ways. Type the following statement to display the PRICE table:

INPUT:
SQL> SELECT * FROM PRICE;
OUTPUT:
ITEM            WHOLESALE
-------------- ----------
TOMATOES              .34
POTATOES              .51
BANANAS               .67
TURNIPS               .45
CHEESE                .89
APPLES                .23
6 rows selected.

Now type:

INPUT/OUTPUT:
SQL> SELECT ITEM, WHOLESALE, WHOLESALE + 0.15
    FROM PRICE;

Here the + adds 15 cents to each price to produce the following:

ITEM           WHOLESALE WHOLESALE+0.15
-------------- --------- --------------
TOMATOES             .34            .49
POTATOES             .51            .66
BANANAS              .67            .82
TURNIPS              .45            .60
CHEESE               .89           1.04
APPLES               .23            .38
6 rows selected.
ANALYSIS:

What is this last column with the unattractive column heading WHOLESALE+0.15? It's not in the original table. (Remember, you used * in the SELECT clause, which causes all the columns to be shown.) SQL allows you to create a virtual or derived column by combining or modifying existing columns.

Retype the original entry:

INPUT/OUTPUT:
SQL> SELECT * FROM PRICE;

The following table results:

ITEM           WHOLESALE
-------------- ---------
TOMATOES             .34
POTATOES             .51
BANANAS              .67
TURNIPS              .45
CHEESE               .89
APPLES               .23
6 rows selected.
ANALYSIS:

The output confirms that the original data has not been changed and that the column heading WHOLESALE+0.15 is not a permanent part of it. In fact, the column heading is so unattractive that you should do something about it.

Type the following:

INPUT/OUTPUT:
SQL> SELECT ITEM, WHOLESALE, (WHOLESALE + 0.15) RETAIL
    FROM PRICE;

Here's the result:

ITEM           WHOLESALE  RETAIL
-------------- ---------  ------
TOMATOES             .34     .49
POTATOES             .51     .66
BANANAS              .67     .82
TURNIPS              .45     .60
CHEESE               .89    1.04
APPLES               .23     .38
6 rows selected.
ANALYSIS:

This is wonderful! Not only can you create new columns, but you can also rename them on the fly. You can rename any of the columns using the syntax column_name alias (note the space between column_name and alias).

For example, the query

INPUT/OUTPUT:
SQL> SELECT ITEM PRODUCE, WHOLESALE, WHOLESALE + 0.25 RETAIL
     FROM PRICE;

renames the columns as follows:

PRODUCE        WHOLESALE    RETAIL
-------------- --------- ---------
TOMATOES             .34       .59
POTATOES             .51       .76
BANANAS              .67       .92
TURNIPS              .45       .70
CHEESE               .89      1.14
APPLES               .23       .48


NOTE: Some implementations of SQL use the syntax <column name = alias>. The preceding example would be written as follows:

SQL> SELECT ITEM = PRODUCE,
     WHOLESALE,
     WHOLESALE + 0.25 = RETAIL,
     FROM PRICE;

Check your implementation for the exact syntax.


You might be wondering what use aliasing is if you are not using command-line SQL. Fair enough. Have you ever wondered how report builders work? Someday, when you are asked to write a report generator, you'll remember this and not spend weeks reinventing what Dr. Codd and IBM have wrought.

So far, you have seen two uses of the plus sign. The first instance was the use of the plus sign in the SELECT clause to perform a calculation on the data and display the calculation. The second use of the plus sign is in the WHERE clause. Using operators in the WHERE clause gives you more flexibility when you specify conditions for retrieving data.

In some implementations of SQL, the plus sign does double duty as a character operator. You'll see that side of the plus a little later today.

Minus (-)

Minus also has two uses. First, it can change the sign of a number. You can use the table HILOW to demonstrate this function.

INPUT:
SQL> SELECT * FROM HILOW;
OUTPUT:
STATE      HIGHTEMP   LOWTEMP
---------- -------- ---------
CA              -50       120
FL               20       110
LA               15        99
ND              -70       101
NE              -60       100

For example, here's a way to manipulate the data:

INPUT/OUTPUT:
SQL> SELECT STATE, -HIGHTEMP LOWS, -LOWTEMP HIGHS
     FROM HILOW;

STATE          LOWS     HIGHS
---------- -------- ---------
CA               50      -120
FL              -20      -110
LA              -15       -99
ND               70      -101
NE               60      -100

The second (and obvious) use of the minus sign is to subtract one column from another. For example:

INPUT/OUTPUT:
SQL> SELECT STATE,
  2  HIGHTEMP LOWS,
  3  LOWTEMP HIGHS,
  4  (LOWTEMP - HIGHTEMP) DIFFERENCE
  5  FROM HILOW;

STATE          LOWS    HIGHS DIFFERENCE
---------- -------- -------- ----------
CA              -50      120        170
FL               20      110         90
LA               15       99         84
ND              -70      101        171
NE              -60      100        160

Notice the use of aliases to fix the data that was entered incorrectly. This remedy is merely a temporary patch, though, and not a permanent fix. You should see to it that the data is corrected and entered correctly in the future. On Day 21, "Common SQL Mistakes/Errors and Resolutions," you'll learn how to correct bad data.

This query not only fixed (at least visually) the incorrect data but also created a new column containing the difference between the highs and lows of each state.

If you accidentally use the minus sign on a character field, you get something like this:

INPUT/OUTPUT:
SQL> SELECT -STATE FROM HILOW;

ERROR:
ORA-01722: invalid number
no rows selected

The exact error message varies with implementation, but the result is the same.

Divide (/)

The division operator has only the one obvious meaning. Using the table PRICE, type the following:

INPUT:
SQL> SELECT * FROM PRICE;
OUTPUT:
ITEM           WHOLESALE
-------------- ---------
TOMATOES             .34
POTATOES             .51
BANANAS              .67
TURNIPS              .45
CHEESE               .89
APPLES               .23
6 rows selected.

You can show the effects of a two-for-one sale by typing the next statement:

INPUT/OUTPUT:
SQL> SELECT ITEM, WHOLESALE, (WHOLESALE/2) SALEPRICE
  2  FROM PRICE;

ITEM           WHOLESALE SALEPRICE
-------------- --------- ---------
TOMATOES             .34       .17
POTATOES             .51      .255
BANANAS              .67      .335
TURNIPS              .45      .225
CHEESE               .89      .445
APPLES               .23      .115
6 rows selected.

The use of division in the preceding SELECT statement is straightforward (except that coming up with half pennies can be tough).

Multiply (*)

The multiplication operator is also straightforward. Again, using the PRICE table, type the following:

INPUT:
SQL> SELECT * FROM PRICE;
OUTPUT:
ITEM           WHOLESALE
-------------- ---------
TOMATOES             .34
POTATOES             .51
BANANAS              .67
TURNIPS              .45
CHEESE               .89
APPLES               .23
6 rows selected.

This query changes the table to reflect an across-the-board 10 percent discount:

INPUT/OUTPUT:
SQL> SELECT ITEM, WHOLESALE, WHOLESALE * 0.9 NEWPRICE
     FROM PRICE;

ITEM           WHOLESALE  NEWPRICE
-------------- ---------  --------
TOMATOES             .34      .306
POTATOES             .51      .459
BANANAS              .67      .603
TURNIPS              .45      .405
CHEESE               .89      .801
APPLES               .23      .207
6 rows selected.

These operators enable you to perform powerful calculations in a SELECT statement.

Modulo (%)

The modulo operator returns the integer remainder of the division operation. Using the table REMAINS, type the following:

INPUT:
SQL> SELECT * FROM REMAINS;
OUTPUT:
NUMERATOR  DENOMINATOR
---------  ------------
       10            5
        8            3
       23            9
       40           17
     1024           16
       85           34
6 rows selected.

You can also create a new column, REMAINDER, to hold the values of NUMERATOR % DENOMINATOR:

INPUT/OUTPUT:
SQL> SELECT NUMERATOR,
     DENOMINATOR,
     NUMERATOR%DENOMINATOR REMAINDER
     FROM REMAINS;

NUMERATOR DENOMINATOR REMAINDER
--------- ----------- ---------
       10           5         0
        8           3         2
       23           9         5
       40          17         6
     1024          16         0
       85          34        17
6 rows selected.

Some implementations of SQL implement modulo as a function called MOD (see Day 4, "Functions: Molding the Data You Retrieve"). The following statement produces results that are identical to the results in the preceding statement:

SQL> SELECT NUMERATOR,
     DENOMINATOR,
     MOD(NUMERATOR,DENOMINATOR) REMAINDER
     FROM REMAINS;

Precedence

This section examines the use of precedence in a SELECT statement. Using the database PRECEDENCE, type the following:

SQL> SELECT * FROM PRECEDENCE;
       N1        N2        N3        N4
--------- --------- --------- ---------
        1         2         3         4
       13        24        35        46
        9         3        23         5
       63         2        45         3
        7         2         1         4

Use the following code segment to test precedence:

INPUT/OUTPUT:
SQL> SELECT
  2  N1+N2*N3/N4,
  3  (N1+N2)*N3/N4,
  4  N1+(N2*N3)/N4
  5  FROM PRECEDENCE;

N1+N2*N3/N4 (N1+N2)*N3/N4 N1+(N2*N3)/N4
----------- ------------- -------------
        2.5          2.25           2.5
   31.26087     28.152174      31.26087
       22.8          55.2          22.8
         93           975            93
        7.5          2.25           7.5

Notice that the first and last columns are identical. If you added a fourth column N1+N2* (N3/N4), its values would also be identical to those of the current first and last columns.

Comparison Operators

True to their name, comparison operators compare expressions and return one of three values: TRUE, FALSE, or Unknown. Wait a minute! Unknown? TRUE and FALSE are self-explanatory, but what is Unknown?

To understand how you could get an Unknown, you need to know a little about the concept of NULL. In database terms NULL is the absence of data in a field. It does not mean a column has a zero or a blank in it. A zero or a blank is a value. NULL means nothing is in that field. If you make a comparison like Field = 9 and the only value for Field is NULL, the comparison will come back Unknown. Because Unknown is an uncomfortable condition, most flavors of SQL change Unknown to FALSE and provide a special operator, IS NULL, to test for a NULL condition.

Here's an example of NULL: Suppose an entry in the PRICE table does not contain a value for WHOLESALE. The results of a query might look like this:

INPUT:
SQL> SELECT * FROM PRICE;
OUTPUT:
ITEM            WHOLESALE
-------------- ----------
TOMATOES              .34
POTATOES              .51
BANANAS               .67
TURNIPS               .45
CHEESE                .89
APPLES                .23
ORANGES

Notice that nothing is printed out in the WHOLESALE field position for oranges. The value for the field WHOLESALE for oranges is NULL. The NULL is noticeable in this case because it is in a numeric column. However, if the NULL appeared in the ITEM column, it would be impossible to tell the difference between NULL and a blank.

Try to find the NULL:

INPUT/OUTPUT:
SQL> SELECT *
  2  FROM PRICE
  3  WHERE WHOLESALE IS NULL;

ITEM            WHOLESALE
-------------- ----------
ORANGES
ANALYSIS:

As you can see by the output, ORANGES is the only item whose value for WHOLESALE is NULL or does not contain a value. What if you use the equal sign (=) instead?

INPUT/OUTPUT:
SQL> SELECT *
     FROM PRICE
     WHERE WHOLESALE = NULL;
no rows selected
ANALYSIS:

You didn't find anything because the comparison WHOLESALE = NULL returned a FALSE--the result was unknown. It would be more appropriate to use an IS NULL instead of =, changing the WHERE statement to WHERE WHOLESALE IS NULL. In this case you would get all the rows where a NULL existed.

This example also illustrates both the use of the most common comparison operator, the equal sign (=), and the playground of all comparison operators, the WHERE clause. You already know about the WHERE clause, so here's a brief look at the equal sign.

Equal (=)

Earlier today you saw how some implementations of SQL use the equal sign in the SELECT clause to assign an alias. In the WHERE clause, the equal sign is the most commonly used comparison operator. Used alone, the equal sign is a very convenient way of selecting one value out of many. Try this:

INPUT:
SQL> SELECT * FROM FRIENDS;
OUTPUT:
LASTNAME       FIRSTNAME       AREACODE PHONE    ST ZIP
-------------- -------------- --------- -------- -- -----
BUNDY          AL                   100 555-1111 IL 22333
MEZA           AL                   200 555-2222 UK
MERRICK        BUD                  300 555-6666 CO 80212
MAST           JD                   381 555-6767 LA 23456
BULHER         FERRIS               345 555-3223 IL 23332

Let's find JD's row. (On a short list this task appears trivial, but you may have more friends than we do--or you may have a list with thousands of records.)

INPUT/OUTPUT:
SQL> SELECT *
     FROM FRIENDS
     WHERE FIRSTNAME = 'JD';

LASTNAME       FIRSTNAME       AREACODE PHONE    ST ZIP
-------------- -------------- --------- -------- -- -----
MAST           JD                   381 555-6767 LA 23456

We got the result that we expected. Try this:

INPUT/OUTPUT:
SQL> SELECT *
     FROM FRIENDS
     WHERE FIRSTNAME = 'AL';

LASTNAME       FIRSTNAME       AREACODE PHONE    ST ZIP
-------------- -------------- --------- -------- -- -----
BUNDY          AL                   100 555-1111 IL 22333
MEZA           AL                   200 555-2222 UK


NOTE: Here you see that = can pull in multiple records. Notice that ZIP is blank on the second record. ZIP is a character field (you learn how to create and populate tables on Day 8, "Manipulating Data"), and in this particular record the NULL demonstrates that a NULL in a character field is impossible to differentiate from a blank field.

Here's another very important lesson concerning case sensitivity:

INPUT/OUTPUT:
SQL> SELECT * FROM FRIENDS
     WHERE FIRSTNAME = 'BUD';

FIRSTNAME
--------------
BUD
1 row selected.

Now try this:

INPUT/OUTPUT:
SQL> select * from friends
     where firstname = 'Bud';

no rows selected.
ANALYSIS:

Even though SQL syntax is not case sensitive, data is. Most companies prefer to store data in uppercase to provide data consistency. You should always store data either in all uppercase or in all lowercase. Mixing case creates difficulties when you try to retrieve accurate data.

Greater Than (>) and Greater Than or Equal To (>=)

The greater than operator (>) works like this:

INPUT:
SQL> SELECT *
     FROM FRIENDS
     WHERE AREACODE > 300;
OUTPUT:
LASTNAME       FIRSTNAME       AREACODE PHONE    ST ZIP
-------------- -------------- --------- -------- -- -----
MAST           JD                   381 555-6767 LA 23456
BULHER         FERRIS               345 555-3223 IL 23332
ANALYSIS:

This example found all the area codes greater than (but not including) 300. To include 300, type this:

INPUT/OUTPUT:
SQL> SELECT *
  2  FROM FRIENDS
  3  WHERE AREACODE >= 300;

LASTNAME       FIRSTNAME       AREACODE PHONE    ST ZIP
-------------- -------------- --------- -------- -- -----
MERRICK        BUD                  300 555-6666 CO 80212
MAST           JD                   381 555-6767 LA 23456
BULHER         FERRIS               345 555-3223 IL 23332
ANALYSIS:

With this change you get area codes starting at 300 and going up. You could achieve the same results with the statement AREACODE > 299.


NOTE: Notice that no quotes surround 300 in this SQL statement. Number-defined fieldsnumber-defined fields do not require quotes.

Less Than (<) and Less Than or Equal To (<=)

As you might expect, these comparison operators work the same way as > and >= work, only in reverse:

INPUT:
SQL> SELECT *
  2  FROM FRIENDS
  3  WHERE STATE < 'LA';
OUTPUT:
LASTNAME       FIRSTNAME       AREACODE PHONE    ST ZIP
-------------- -------------- --------- -------- -- ------
BUNDY          AL                   100 555-1111 IL 22333
MERRICK        BUD                  300 555-6666 CO 80212
BULHER         FERRIS               345 555-3223 IL 23332


NOTE: How did STATE get changed to ST? Because the column has only two characters, the column name is shortened to two characters in the returned rows. If the column name had been COWS, it would come out CO. The widths of AREACODE and PHONE are wider than their column names, so they are not truncated.
ANALYSIS:

Wait a minute. Did you just use < on a character field? Of course you did. You can use any of these operators on any data type. The result varies by data type. For example, use lowercase in the following state search:

INPUT/OUTPUT:
SQL> SELECT *
  2  FROM FRIENDS
  3  WHERE STATE < 'la';

LASTNAME       FIRSTNAME       AREACODE PHONE    ST ZIP
-------------- -------------- --------- -------- -- -----
BUNDY          AL                   100 555-1111 IL 22333
MEZA           AL                   200 555-2222 UK
MERRICK        BUD                  300 555-6666 CO 80212
MAST           JD                   381 555-6767 LA 23456
BULHER         FERRIS               345 555-3223 IL 23332
ANALYSIS:

Uppercase is usually sorted before lowercase; therefore, the uppercase codes returned are less than 'la'. Again, to be safe, check your implementation.


TIP: To be sure of how these operators will behave, check your language tables. Most PC implementations use the ASCII tables. Some other platforms use EBCDIC.

To include the state of Louisiana in the original search, type

INPUT/OUTPUT:
SQL> SELECT *
  2  FROM FRIENDS
  3  WHERE STATE <= 'LA';

LASTNAME       FIRSTNAME       AREACODE PHONE    ST ZIP
-------------- -------------- --------- -------- -- -----
BUNDY          AL                   100 555-1111 IL 22333
MERRICK        BUD                  300 555-6666 CO 80212
MAST           JD                   381 555-6767 LA 23456
BULHER         FERRIS               345 555-3223 IL 23332

Inequalities (< > or !=)

When you need to find everything except for certain data, use the inequality symbol, which can be either < > or !=, depending on your SQL implementation. For example, to find everyone who is not AL, type this:

INPUT:
SQL> SELECT *
  2  FROM FRIENDS
  3  WHERE FIRSTNAME <> 'AL';
OUTPUT:
LASTNAME       FIRSTNAME       AREACODE PHONE    ST ZIP
-------------- -------------- --------- -------- -- -----
MERRICK        BUD                  300 555-6666 CO 80212
MAST           JD                   381 555-6767 LA 23456
BULHER         FERRIS               345 555-3223 IL 23332

To find everyone not living in California, type this:

INPUT/OUTPUT:
SQL> SELECT *
  2  FROM FRIENDS
  3  WHERE STATE != 'CA';

LASTNAME       FIRSTNAME       AREACODE PHONE    ST ZIP
-------------- -------------- --------- -------- -- -----
BUNDY          AL                   100 555-1111 IL 22333
MEZA           AL                   200 555-2222 UK
MERRICK        BUD                  300 555-6666 CO 80212
MAST           JD                   381 555-6767 LA 23456
BULHER         FERRIS               345 555-3223 IL 23332


NOTE: Notice that both symbols, <> and !=, can express "not equals."

Character Operators

You can use character operators to manipulate the way character strings are represented, both in the output of data and in the process of placing conditions on data to be retrieved. This section describes two character operators: the LIKE operator and the || operator, which conveys the concept of character concatenation.

I Want to Be Like LIKE

What if you wanted to select parts of a database that fit a pattern but weren't quite exact matches? You could use the equal sign and run through all the possible cases, but that process would be boring and time-consuming. Instead, you could use LIKE. Consider the following:

INPUT:
SQL> SELECT * FROM PARTS;
OUTPUT:
NAME           LOCATION       PARTNUMBER
-------------- -------------- ----------
APPENDIX       MID-STOMACH             1
ADAMS APPLE    THROAT                  2
HEART          CHEST                   3
SPINE          BACK                    4
ANVIL          EAR                     5
KIDNEY         MID-BACK                6

How can you find all the parts located in the back? A quick visual inspection of this simple table shows that it has two parts, but unfortunately the locations have slightly different names. Try this:

INPUT/OUTPUT:
SQL> SELECT *
  2  FROM PARTS
  3  WHERE LOCATION LIKE '%BACK%';

NAME           LOCATION       PARTNUMBER
-------------- -------------- ----------
SPINE          BACK                    4
KIDNEY         MID-BACK                6
ANALYSIS:

You can see the use of the percent sign (%) in the statement after LIKE. When used inside a LIKE expression, % is a wildcard. What you asked for was any occurrence of BACK in the column location. If you queried

INPUT:
SQL> SELECT *
     FROM PARTS
     WHERE LOCATION LIKE 'BACK%';

you would get any occurrence that started with BACK:

OUTPUT:
NAME           LOCATION       PARTNUMBER
-------------- -------------- ----------
SPINE          BACK                    4

If you queried

INPUT:
SQL> SELECT *
     FROM PARTS
     WHERE NAME LIKE 'A%';

you would get any name that starts with A:

OUTPUT:
NAME           LOCATION       PARTNUMBER
-------------- -------------- ----------
APPENDIX       MID-STOMACH             1
ADAMS APPLE    THROAT                  2
ANVIL          EAR                     5

Is LIKE case sensitive? Try the next query to find out.

INPUT/OUTPUT:
SQL> SELECT *
     FROM PARTS
     WHERE NAME LIKE 'a%';

no rows selected
ANALYSIS:

The answer is yes. References to data are always case sensitive.

What if you want to find data that matches all but one character in a certain pattern? In this case you could use a different type of wildcard: the underscore.

Underscore (_)

The underscore is the single-character wildcard. Using a modified version of the table FRIENDS, type this:

INPUT:
SQL> SELECT * FROM FRIENDS;
OUTPUT:
LASTNAME       FIRSTNAME       AREACODE PHONE    ST ZIP
-------------- -------------- --------- -------- -- -----
BUNDY          AL                   100 555-1111 IL 22333
MEZA           AL                   200 555-2222 UK
MERRICK        UD                   300 555-6666 CO 80212
MAST           JD                   381 555-6767 LA 23456
BULHER         FERRIS               345 555-3223 IL 23332
PERKINS        ALTON                911 555-3116 CA 95633
BOSS           SIR                  204 555-2345 CT 95633

To find all the records where STATE starts with C, type the following:

INPUT/OUTPUT:
SQL> SELECT *
  2  FROM FRIENDS
  3  WHERE STATE LIKE 'C_';
LASTNAME       FIRSTNAME       AREACODE PHONE    ST ZIP
-------------- -------------- --------- -------- -- -----
MERRICK        BUD                  300 555-6666 CO 80212
PERKINS        ALTON                911 555-3116 CA 95633
BOSS           SIR                  204 555-2345 CT 95633

You can use several underscores in a statement:

INPUT/OUTPUT:
SQL> SELECT *
  2  FROM FRIENDS
  3  WHERE PHONE LIKE'555-6_6_';
LASTNAME       FIRSTNAME       AREACODE PHONE    ST ZIP
-------------- -------------- --------- -------- -- -----
MERRICK        BUD                  300 555-6666 CO 80212
MAST           JD                   381 555-6767 LA 23456

The previous statement could also be written as follows:

INPUT/OUTPUT:
SQL> SELECT *
  2  FROM FRIENDS
  3  WHERE PHONE LIKE '555-6%';

LASTNAME       FIRSTNAME       AREACODE PHONE    ST ZIP
-------------- -------------- --------- -------- -- -----
MERRICK        BUD                  300 555-6666 CO 80212
MAST           JD                   381 555-6767 LA 23456

Notice that the results are identical. These two wildcards can be combined. The next example finds all records with L as the second character:

INPUT/OUTPUT:
SQL> SELECT *
  2  FROM FRIENDS
  3  WHERE FIRSTNAME LIKE '_L%';

LASTNAME       FIRSTNAME       AREACODE PHONE    ST ZIP
-------------- -------------- --------- -------- -- -----
BUNDY          AL                   100 555-1111 IL 22333
MEZA           AL                   200 555-2222 UK
PERKINS        ALTON                911 555-3116 CA 95633

Concatenation (||)

The || (double pipe) symbol concatenates two strings. Try this:

INPUT:
SQL> SELECT FIRSTNAME || LASTNAME ENTIRENAME
  2  FROM FRIENDS;
OUTPUT:
ENTIRENAME
----------------------
AL             BUNDY
AL             MEZA
BUD            MERRICK
JD             MAST
FERRIS         BULHER
ALTON          PERKINS
SIR            BOSS
7 rows selected.
ANALYSIS:

Notice that || is used instead of +. If you use + to try to concatenate the strings, the SQL interpreter used for this example (Personal Oracle7) returns the following error:

INPUT/OUTPUT:
SQL> SELECT FIRSTNAME + LASTNAME ENTIRENAME
     FROM FRIENDS;

ERROR:
ORA-01722: invalid number

It is looking for two numbers to add and throws the error invalid number when it doesn't find any.


NOTE: Some implementations of SQL use the plus sign to concatenate strings. Check your implementation.

Here's a more practical example using concatenation:

INPUT/OUTPUT:
SQL> SELECT LASTNAME || ',' || FIRSTNAME NAME
     FROM FRIENDS;

NAME
------------------------------------------------------
BUNDY    , AL
MEZA     , AL
MERRICK  , BUD
MAST     , JD
BULHER   , FERRIS
PERKINS  , ALTON
BOSS     , SIR
7 rows selected.
ANALYSIS:

This statement inserted a comma between the last name and the first name.


NOTE: Notice the extra spaces between the first name and the last name in these examples. These spaces are actually part of the data. With certain data types, spaces are right-padded to values less than the total length allocated for a field. See your implementation. Data types will be discussed on Day 9, "Creating and Maintaining Tables."

So far you have performed the comparisons one at a time. That method is fine for some problems, but what if you need to find all the people at work with last names starting with P who have less than three days of vacation time?

Logical Operators

logical operatorsLogical operators separate two or more conditions in the WHERE clause of an SQL statement.

Vacation time is always a hot topic around the workplace. Say you designed a table called VACATION for the accounting department:

INPUT:
SQL> SELECT * FROM VACATION;
OUTPUT:
LASTNAME       EMPLOYEENUM    YEARS  LEAVETAKEN
-------------- ----------- --------- ----------
ABLE                   101        2           4
BAKER                  104        5          23
BLEDSOE                107        8          45
BOLIVAR                233        4          80
BOLD                   210       15         100
COSTALES               211       10          78
6 rows selected.

Suppose your company gives each employee 12 days of leave each year. Using what you have learned and a logical operator, find all the employees whose names start with B and who have more than 50 days of leave coming.

INPUT/OUTPUT:
SQL> SELECT LASTNAME,
  2  YEARS * 12 - LEAVETAKEN REMAINING
  3  FROM VACATION
  4  WHERE LASTNAME LIKE 'B%'
  5  AND
  6  YEARS * 12 - LEAVETAKEN > 50;

LASTNAME       REMAINING
-------------- ---------
BLEDSOE               51
BOLD                  80
ANALYSIS:

This query is the most complicated you have done so far. The SELECT clause (lines 1 and 2) uses arithmetic operators to determine how many days of leave each employee has remaining. The normal precedence computes YEARS * 12 - LEAVETAKEN. (A clearer approach would be to write (YEARS * 12) - LEAVETAKEN.)

LIKE is used in line 4 with the wildcard % to find all the B names. Line 6 uses the > to find all occurrences greater than 50.

The new element is on line 5. You used the logical operator AND to ensure that you found records that met the criteria in lines 4 and 6.

AND

AND means that the expressions on both sides must be true to return TRUE. If either expression is false, AND returns FALSE. For example, to find out which employees have been with the company for 5 years or less and have taken more than 20 days leave, try this:

INPUT:
SQL> SELECT LASTNAME
  2  FROM VACATION
  3  WHERE YEARS <= 5 
  4  AND
  5  LEAVETAKEN > 20 ;
OUTPUT:
LASTNAME
--------
BAKER
BOLIVAR

If you want to know which employees have been with the company for 5 years or more and have taken less than 50 percent of their leave, you could write:

INPUT/OUTPUT:
SQL> SELECT LASTNAME WORKAHOLICS
  2  FROM VACATION
  3  WHERE YEARS >= 5
  4  AND
  5  ((YEARS *12)-LEAVETAKEN)/(YEARS * 12) < 0.50;

WORKAHOLICS
---------------
BAKER
BLEDSOE

Check these people for burnout. Also check out how we used the AND to combine these two conditions.

OR

You can also use OR to sum up a series of conditions. If any of the comparisons is true, OR returns TRUE. To illustrate the difference, conditionsrun the last query with OR instead of with AND:

INPUT:
SQL> SELECT LASTNAME WORKAHOLICS
  2  FROM VACATION
  3  WHERE YEARS >= 5
  4  OR
  5   ((YEARS *12)-LEAVETAKEN)/(YEARS * 12) >= 0.50;
OUTPUT:
WORKAHOLICS
---------------
ABLE
BAKER
BLEDSOE
BOLD
COSTALES
ANALYSIS:

The original names are still in the list, but you have three new entries (who would probably resent being called workaholics). These three new names made the list because they satisfied one of the conditions. OR requires that only one of the conditions be true in order for data to be returned.

NOT

NOT means just that. If the condition it applies to evaluates to TRUE, NOT make it FALSE. If the condition after the NOT is FALSE, it becomes TRUE. For example, the following SELECT returns the only two names not beginning with B in the table:

INPUT:
SQL> SELECT *
  2  FROM VACATION
  3  WHERE LASTNAME NOT LIKE 'B%';
OUTPUT:
LASTNAME       EMPLOYEENUM    YEARS LEAVETAKEN
-------------- ----------- -------- ----------
ABLE                   101        2          4
COSTALES               211       10         78

NOT can also be used with the operator IS when applied to NULL. Recall the PRICES table where we put a NULL value in the WHOLESALE column opposite the item ORANGES.

INPUT/OUTPUT:
SQL> SELECT * FROM PRICE;

ITEM           WHOLESALE
-------------- ---------
TOMATOES             .34
POTATOES             .51
BANANAS              .67
TURNIPS              .45
CHEESE               .89
APPLES               .23
ORANGES
7 rows selected.

To find the non-NULL items, type this:

INPUT/OUTPUT:
SQL> SELECT *
  2  FROM PRICE
  3  WHERE WHOLESALE IS NOT NULL;

ITEM           WHOLESALE
-------------- ---------
TOMATOES             .34
POTATOES             .51
BANANAS              .67
TURNIPS              .45
CHEESE               .89
APPLES               .23
6 rows selected.

Set Operators

On Day 1, "Introduction to SQL," you learned that SQL is based on the theory of sets. The following sections examine set operators.

UNION and UNION ALL

UNION returns the results of two queries minus the duplicate rows. The following two tables represent the rosters of teams:

INPUT:
SQL> SELECT * FROM FOOTBALL;
OUTPUT:
NAME
--------------------
ABLE
BRAVO
CHARLIE
DECON
EXITOR
FUBAR
GOOBER
7 rows selected.
INPUT:
SQL> SELECT * FROM SOFTBALL;
OUTPUT:
NAME
--------------------
ABLE
BAKER
CHARLIE
DEAN
EXITOR
FALCONER
GOOBER
7 rows selected.

How many different people play on one team or another?

INPUT/OUTPUT:
SQL> SELECT NAME FROM SOFTBALL
  2  UNION
  3  SELECT NAME FROM FOOTBALL;

NAME
--------------------
ABLE
BAKER
BRAVO
CHARLIE
DEAN
DECON
EXITOR
FALCONER
FUBAR
GOOBER
10 rows selected.

UNION returns 10 distinct names from the two lists. How many names are on both lists (including duplicates)?

INPUT/OUTPUT:
SQL> SELECT NAME FROM SOFTBALL
  2  UNION ALL
  3  SELECT NAME FROM FOOTBALL;

NAME
--------------------
ABLE
BAKER
CHARLIE
DEAN
EXITOR
FALCONER
GOOBER
ABLE
BRAVO
CHARLIE
DECON
EXITOR
FUBAR
GOOBER
14 rows selected.
ANALYSIS:

The combined list--courtesy of the UNION ALL statement--has 14 names. UNION ALL works just like UNION except it does not eliminate duplicates. Now show me a list of players who are on both teams. You can't do that with UNION--you need to learn INTERSECT.

INTERSECT

INTERSECT returns only the rows found by both queries. The next SELECT statement shows the list of players who play on both teams:

INPUT:
SQL> SELECT * FROM FOOTBALL
  2  INTERSECT
  3  SELECT * FROM SOFTBALL;
OUTPUT:
NAME
--------------------
ABLE
CHARLIE
EXITOR
GOOBER
ANALYSIS:

In this example INTERSECT finds the short list of players who are on both teams by combining the results of the two SELECT statements.

MINUS (Difference)

Minus returns the rows from the first query that were not present in the second. For example:

INPUT:
SQL> SELECT * FROM FOOTBALL
  2  MINUS
  3  SELECT * FROM SOFTBALL;
OUTPUT:
NAME
--------------------
BRAVO
DECON
FUBAR
ANALYSIS:

The preceding query shows the three football players who are not on the softball team. If you reverse the order, you get the three softball players who aren't on the football team:

INPUT:
SQL> SELECT * FROM SOFTBALL
  2  MINUS
  3  SELECT * FROM FOOTBALL;
OUTPUT:
NAME
--------------------
BAKER
DEAN
FALCONER

Miscellaneous Operators: IN and BETWEEN

The two operators IN and BETWEEN provide a shorthand for functions you already know how to do. If you wanted to find friends in Colorado, California, and Louisiana, you could type the following:

INPUT:
SQL> SELECT *
  2  FROM FRIENDS
  3  WHERE STATE= 'CA'
  4  OR
  5  STATE ='CO'
  6  OR
  7  STATE = 'LA';
OUTPUT:
LASTNAME       FIRSTNAME       AREACODE PHONE    ST ZIP
-------------- -------------- --------- -------- -- -----
MERRICK        BUD                  300 555-6666 CO 80212
MAST           JD                   381 555-6767 LA 23456
PERKINS        ALTON                911 555-3116 CA 95633

Or you could type this:

INPUT/OUTPUT:
SQL> SELECT *
  2  FROM FRIENDS
  3  WHERE STATE IN('CA','CO','LA');
LASTNAME       FIRSTNAME       AREACODE PHONE    ST ZIP
-------------- -------------- --------- -------- -- -----
MERRICK        BUD                  300 555-6666 CO 80212
MAST           JD                   381 555-6767 LA 23456
PERKINS        ALTON                911 555-3116 CA 95633
ANALYSIS:

The second example is shorter and more readable than the first. You never know when you might have to go back and work on something you wrote months ago. IN also works with numbers. Consider the following, where the column AREACODE is a number:

INPUT/OUTPUT:
SQL> SELECT *
  2  FROM FRIENDS
  3  WHERE AREACODE IN(100,381,204);

LASTNAME       FIRSTNAME       AREACODE PHONE    ST ZIP
-------------- -------------- --------- -------- -- -----
BUNDY          AL                   100 555-1111 IL 22333
MAST           JD                   381 555-6767 LA 23456
BOSS           SIR                  204 555-2345 CT 95633

If you needed a range of things from the PRICE table, you could write the following:

INPUT/OUTPUT:
SQL>  SELECT *
  2  FROM PRICE
  3  WHERE WHOLESALE > 0.25
  4  AND
  5  WHOLESALE < 0.75;

ITEM           WHOLESALE
-------------- ---------
TOMATOES             .34
POTATOES             .51
BANANAS              .67
TURNIPS              .45

Or using BETWEEN, you would write this:

INPUT/OUTPUT:
SQL> SELECT *
  2  FROM PRICE
  3  WHERE WHOLESALE BETWEEN 0.25 AND 0.75;

ITEM            WHOLESALE
-------------- ---------
TOMATOES              .34
POTATOES              .51
BANANAS               .67
TURNIPS               .45

Again, the second example is a cleaner, more readable solution than the first.


NOTE: If a WHOLESALE value of 0.25 existed in the PRICE table, that record would have been retrieved also. Parameters used in the BETWEEN operator are inclusive parametersinclusive.

Summary

At the beginning of Day 3, you knew how to use the basic SELECT and FROM clauses. Now you know how to use a host of operators that enable you to fine-tune your requests to the database. You learned how to use arithmetic, comparison, character, logical, and set operators. This powerful set of tools provides the cornerstone of your SQL knowledge.

Q&A

Q How does all of this information apply to me if I am not using SQL from the command line as depicted in the examples?

A Whether you use SQL in COBOL as Embedded SQL or in Microsoft's Open Database Connectivity (ODBC), you use the same basic constructions. You will use what you learned today and yesterday repeatedly as you work with SQL.

Q Why are you constantly telling me to check my implementation? I thought there was a standard!

A There is an ANSI standard (the most recent version is 1992); however, most vendors modify it somewhat to suit their databases. The basics are similar if not identical, and each instance has extensions that other vendors copy and improve. We have chosen to use ANSI as a starting point but point out the differences as we go along.

Workshop

The Workshop provides quiz questions to help solidify your understanding of the material covered, as well as exercises to provide you with experience in using what you have learned. Try to answer the quiz and exercise questions before checking the answers in Appendix F, "Answers to Quizzes and Exercises."

Quiz

Use the FRIENDS table to answer the following questions.

LASTNAME       FIRSTNAME       AREACODE PHONE    ST ZIP
-------------- -------------- --------- -------- -- -----
BUNDY          AL                   100 555-1111 IL 22333
MEZA           AL                   200 555-2222 UK
MERRICK        BUD                  300 555-6666 CO 80212
MAST           JD                   381 555-6767 LA 23456
BULHER         FERRIS               345 555-3223 IL 23332
PERKINS        ALTON                911 555-3116 CA 95633
BOSS           SIR                  204 555-2345 CT 95633
1. Write a query that returns everyone in the database whose last name begins with M.

2. Write a query that returns everyone who lives in Illinois with a first name of AL.

3. Given two tables (PART1 and PART2) containing columns named PARTNO, how would you find out which part numbers are in both tables? Write the query.

4. What shorthand could you use instead of WHERE a >= 10 AND a <=30?

5. What will this query return?

SELECT FIRSTNAME
FROM FRIENDS
WHERE FIRSTNAME = 'AL'
  AND LASTNAME = 'BULHER';

Exercises

1. Using the FRIENDS table, write a query that returns the following:



NAME                ST
------------------- --
AL             FROM IL
INPUT:
SQL> SELECT (FIRSTNAME || 'FROM') NAME, STATE
  2  FROM FRIENDS
  3  WHERE STATE = 'IL'
  4  AND
  5  LASTNAME = 'BUNDY';
OUTPUT:
NAME                ST
------------------- --
AL             FROM IL
2. Using the FRIENDS table, write a query that returns the following:



NAME                       PHONE
-------------------------- -------------
MERRICK, BUD               300-555-6666
MAST, JD                   381-555-6767
BULHER, FERRIS             345-555-3223


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