...
The SQL SELECT Statement
The SELECT
statement is used to select data from a table.
The data returned is stored in a result table, called the result-set.
SELECT Syntax
Code Block |
---|
|
SELECT column1, column2, ...
FROM table_name |
Here, column1
, column2
, ... are the field names of the table you want to select data from. If you want to select all the fields available in the table, use the following syntax:
Code Block |
---|
|
SELECT *
FROM table_name |
The SQL WHERE Clause
The WHERE
clause is used to filter records.
The WHERE
clause is used to extract only those records that fulfil a specified condition.
WHERE Syntax
Code Block |
---|
|
SELECT column1, column2, ...
FROM table_name
WHERE condition |
Example
The following SQL statement selects the “firstname“ firstname
and “surname“ surname
of all the people from the country
"Mexico"=
‘Mexico', in the "people
" table:
Code Block |
---|
|
SELECT firstname, surname
FROM people
WHERE country = 'Mexico' |
The SQL ORDER BY Clause
The ORDER BY
clause is used to sort your columns of data by a particular ordering e.g. ASC
ascending or DESC
descending and even across multiple columns for more advanced sorting.
ORDER BY Syntax
Code Block |
---|
|
SELECT column1, column2, ...
FROM table_name
WHERE condition
ORDER BY column order |
Example Descending order
The following SQL statement selects the “firstname“ firstname
and “surname“ surname
of all the people from the country
"Mexico"=
‘Mexico', in the "people
" table and then sorts by surname
in ascending order DESC
(default descending order by behaviour):
Code Block |
---|
|
SELECT firstname, surname
FROM people
WHERE country = 'Mexico'
ORDER BY surname |
You could also add the keyword ASC
but in this case, the default behaviour is ascending order.
Example Ascending order
The following SQL statement selects the “firstname“ firstname
and “surname“ surname
of all the people from the country
"Mexico"=
‘Mexico', in the "people
" table and then sorts by surname
in desc ASC
(ascending order (- the default):
Code Block |
---|
|
SELECT firstname, surname
FROM people
WHERE country = 'Mexico'
ORDER BY surname DESC |
Example
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ORDER BY Multiple Columns
The following SQL statement selects the “firstname“ firstname
and “surname“ surname
of all the people from the country
"Mexico"=
‘Mexico', in the "people
" table and then sorts by surname
in DESC
(descending) order and then firstname
in ASC
(ascending order (- the default):
Code Block |
---|
|
SELECT firstname, surname
FROM people
WHERE country = 'Mexico'
ORDER BY surname DESC, firstname ASC |
Info |
---|
It is also possible to reference your columns numerically int he order they appear in the select statement e.g. ORDER BY 2 DESC, 1 ASC would achieve the same intended behaviour. |
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If you are interested in digging further into SQL there are a wealth of resources (articles, books, videos online) and your organisation may even have a learning platform with paid resources for you to learn from. In the mean time a useful basic cheatsheet can be found here:https://learnsql.com/blog/sql-basics-cheat-sheet/
Related
...
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