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Concepts of Database Management Seventh Edition Chapter 3 The Relational Model 2: SQL Objectives • • • • • Introduce Structured Query Language (SQL) Use simple and compound conditions in SQL Use computed fields in SQL Use built-in SQL functions Use subqueries in SQL 2 Objectives (continued) • • • • • Group records in SQL Join tables using SQL Perform union operations in SQL Use SQL to update database data Use an SQL query to create a table in a database 3 Introduction • SQL (Structured Query Language) – Allows users to query a relational database – Must enter commands to obtain the desired results – Standard language for relational database manipulation 4 Getting Started with SQL • If you are completing the work in this chapter using Microsoft Office Access 2007, Microsoft Office Access 2010, or MySQL version 4.1 or higher, the following sections contain specific information about your DBMS 5 Getting Started with Microsoft Office Access 2007 and 2010 • If you are using the Access 2007 or 2010 version of the Premiere Products database provided with the Data Files for this text: – Tables in the database have already been created – You will not need to execute the CREATE TABLE commands to create the tables or the INSERT commands to add records to the tables 6 Getting Started with Microsoft Office Access 2007 and 2010 (continued) • To execute SQL commands shown in the figures in Access 2007 or Access 2010: – – – – – Open the Premiere Products database Click the Create tab on the Ribbon Click the Query Design button in the Other group Click the Close button in the Show Table dialog box Click the View button arrow in the Results group on the Query Design Tools tab, then click SQL View – The Query1 tab displays the query in SQL view, ready for you to type your SQL commands 7 Getting Started with MySQL • MySQL-Premiere script provided with the Data Files for this text will: – Activate the database – Create the tables – Insert the records • To run a script in MySQL: – Type the SOURCE command followed by the name of the file – Press the Enter key 8 Getting Started with MySQL (continued) • Before typing commands in MySQL, you must activate the database by typing the USE command followed by the name of the database • The most recent command entered in MySQL is stored in a special area of memory called the statement history 9 Table Creation • SQL CREATE TABLE command – Creates a table by describing its layout • Typical restrictions placed on table and column names by DBMS – Names cannot exceed 18 characters – Names must start with a letter – Names can contain only letters, numbers, and underscores (_) – Names cannot contain spaces 10 Table Creation (continued) • INTEGER – Number without a decimal point • SMALLINT – Uses less space than INTEGER • DECIMAL(p,q) – P number of digits; q number of decimal places • CHAR(n) – Character string n places long • DATE – Dates in DD-MON-YYYY or MM/DD/YYYY form 11 Simple Retrieval • SELECT-FROM-WHERE: SQL retrieval command – SELECT clause: lists fields to display – FROM clause: lists table or tables that contain data to display in query results – WHERE clause (optional): lists any conditions to be applied to the data to retrieve • Simple condition: field name, a comparison operator, and either another field name or a value 12 Simple Retrieval (continued) • Retrieving all fields and all records – Syntax: SELECT * FROM <table> – Example 1: SELECT * FROM Customer – Example 2: SELECT * FROM Rep • Retrieving specific field(s) • Syntax: SELECT <field1>, <field2>,..<fieldn> FROM <table> • Example 1: SELECT Customername, City, State FROM Customer • Example 2: SELECT Repnum, Lastname, Firstname, Commission, Rate FROM Rep 13 Non-Graded Exercise 1. Show all the fields and records from Rep table 2. Show all fields and records Item table 3. Show the Last name and First name of all Sales Rep from Rep table 4. Show the Item number, Description, On Hand Quantity and Price from Item table 14 Simple Retrieval – Filtering Records • Filtering records to retrieve using WHERE clause – Syntax: SELECT * FROM <table> – Example 1: (Filtering records with a Text/String field) SELECT * FROM Customer WHERE City=‘Grove’ – Example 2: (Filtering records with a Numeric field) SELECT * FROM Customer WHERE CreditLimit=7500 – Example 3: (Filtering records using specific fields) SELECT Customername, City WHERE City = ‘Grove’ – Example 4: (Filtering records using not equal) SELECT * FROM City WHERE City <> ‘Fullton’ – Note : If it is a string or a text the value should have a quote like in ‘Grove’ but if it is numeric do not put a quote. 15 Simple Retrieval (continued) FIGURE 3-6: SQL query with WHERE condition 16 Simple Retrieval (continued) FIGURE 3-7: Query results 17 Relational Operators Operator Description Example > Greater Than Age>20 < Less than Age<21 = Equal City=‘Grove’ >= Greater than or Equal CreditLimit >= 10000 <= Less than or Equal Balance<=5000 <> Not Equal City <> ‘Grove’ Date Comparisons Database Example MS Access OrderDate = #10/21/2013# MySQL OrderDate = DATE(‘2013-10-21’) 18 Non-Graded Exercise 1. Show all Customers that comes from the City of Northfield from Customer table 2. Show all products from Item table whose Category is TOY 3. Show all Customers whose Balance is greater than 2,000 from Customer table 4. Show all Customers whose Credit Limit is above or equal to 7500 from Customer table 5. Show all Customers whose balance is less than 500 from Customer table 6. Show all orders from Orders table whose order is beyond 10/13/2015 19 Graded Exercise No. 1 Check-up Time 20 Compound Conditions • Compound condition – Connecting two or more simple conditions using one or both of the following operators: AND and OR – Preceding a single condition with the NOT operator • Connecting simple conditions using AND operator – All of the simple conditions must be true for the compound condition to be true • Connecting simple conditions using OR operator – Any of the simple conditions must be true for the compound condition to be true 21 AND – Truth Table • In order for AND to be true all conditions/expressions should be true Condition 1 Condition 2 Result False False False False True False True False False True True True 22 AND – Truth Table (Example) • Example : Age>20 AND State=‘Pohnpei’ Age State Result/Answer 20 Chuuk False 21 Yap False 19 Pohnpei False 21 Pohnpei True 23 OR – Truth Table • In order for OR to be True at least one conditions/expressions should be true Condition 1 Condition 2 Result False False False False True True True False True True True True 24 OR – Truth Table (Example) • Example : Age>20 OR State=‘Pohnpei’ Age State Result/Answer 20 Chuuk False 21 Yap True 19 Pohnpei True 21 Pohnpei True 25 Compound Conditions (continued) FIGURE 3-14: Compound condition that uses the AND operator FIGURE 3-15: Query results ©2015 Cengage Learning. All Rights Reserved. May not be copied, scanned, or duplicated, in whole or in part, except for use as permitted in a license distributed with a certain product or service or otherwise on a password-protected website for classroom use. 26 Compound Conditions (continued) FIGURE 3-16: Compound condition that uses the OR operator FIGURE 3-17: Query results ©2015 Cengage Learning. All Rights Reserved. May not be copied, scanned, or duplicated, in whole or in part, except for use as permitted in a license distributed with a certain product or service or otherwise on a password-protected website for classroom use. 27 Non-Graded Exercise 1. Show all products from Item table whose Category is GME and its price is above $20 2. Show all Customers that comes from either the City of Mesa or Grove from Customer table 3. Show all Customers whose Credit Limit is $7,500 but its Balance is above $1,000 from Customer table 4. Show all products from Item table whose Storehouse is from either 1 or 2 5. Show all products from Item table whose On hand quantity is above 20 and coming from Storehouse no. 3 28 Compound Conditions (continued) • Preceding a condition by NOT operator – Reverses the truth or falsity of the original condition • BETWEEN operator – Value must be between the listed numbers 29 Compound Conditions (continued) • Using NOT operator – Example 1: SELECT * FROM Customer WHERE NOT City=‘Grove’ – Example 2: SELECT * FROM Customer WHERE NOT CreditLimit=10000 • Using BETWEEN operator – Example 1: SELECT * FROM Customer WHERE Balance BETWEEN 2000 AND 5000 – Example 2: SELECT * FROM Orders WHERE Orderdate BETWEEN #10/12/2015# AND #10/13/2015 30 Non-Graded Exercise 1. Show all products from Item whose Category is not from GME 2. Show all products from Item whose Storehouse is not from Storehouse number 3 3. Show all customers from Customer whose sales representative is not Repnum no. 45 4. Show all products from Item whose Price is from $20 to $100. 5. Show all products from Item whose On hand quantity is from 20 to 100 31 Computed Fields • Computed field or calculated field – Field whose values you derive from existing fields – Can involve: • • • • Addition (+) Subtraction (-) Multiplication (*) Division (/) 32 Computed Fields (continued) • Numeric Computed Fields – Example 1: Computing the Net by deducting Credit Limit from Balance SELECT Customername, (Balance-CreditLimit) as Net FROM Customer – Example 2: Computing the Running Total by Multiplying On hand quantity with Price SELECT Partnum, Description, OnHand * Price as RunningTotal FROM Item • Non-numeric Computed Field – Example 1: Concatenating or Joining Last name and First name of the Sales as Full Name SELECT Repnum, Lastname + “, “ + Firstname as Fullname FROM Rep 33 Computed Fields (continued) FIGURE 3-25: SQL query with a computed field and condition FIGURE 3-26: Query results 34 Non-Graded Exercise 1. Show customer name and a computed field name Net using the formula CreditLimit – Balance from Customer table. 2. Get the Running Total from each order by multiplying Number Ordered and Quoted Price of the Orderline table. Aside from the Running Total show also the Order Number. 3. Get the Running Total per product from Item table by multiplying Quantity on Hand by price. Show also the Description of the product. 4. Make a concatenated field for Street, City, State and Zip fields and named it Address, from Customer table. Show also the Customer name before the address. 35 Using Special Operators (LIKE and IN) • Wildcards in Access SQL – Asterisk (*): collection of characters – Question mark (?): any individual character • Wildcards in MySQL – Percent sign (%): any collection of characters – Underscore (_): any individual character • To use a wildcard, include the LIKE operator in the WHERE clause • IN operator provides a concise way of phrasing certain conditions 36 Using LIKE operator and wildcards • Using asterisk for collection of characters pattern – Example 1: Displays customer whose name starts with letter B SELECT * FROM Customer WHERE customername LIKE ‘B*’ – Example 2: Displays customer whose name starts with the word Brook SELECT * FROM Customer WHERE customername LIKE ‘Brook*’ • Using question mark for individual/single character – Example 1: Display orders whose partnum starts with letter K followed by any 3 characters. SELECT * FROM Orderline WHERE Itemnum LIKE ‘K???’ 37 Using the IN operator – Example 1: Displays customer whose credit limit is either $5,000 or $10,000 or $15,000 SELECT * FROM Customer WHERE creditlimit IN(5000,10000,15000) – Example 2: Displays customer who comes from the City of Grove, Crystal, Fillmore or Northfield SELECT * FROM Customer WHERE city IN(‘Grove’,’Fullton’,’Northfield’) 38 Non-Graded Exercise 1. Show all products from Item table whose Description starts with letter ‘P’ 2. Show all customers from Customer table whose Street starts with 3 3. Using IN show products whose Category is either TOY or PZL from Item table 4. Using IN show customers from Customer table whose Credit Limit is either 5000, 7500 or 15000. 39 Sorting • Sort data using the ORDER BY clause • Sort key: field on which to sort data • When sorting data on two fields: – Major sort key (or primary sort key): more important sort key – Minor sort key (or secondary sort key): less important sort key 40 Using the ORDER BY statement – Example 1: Displays customer sorted by customer name SELECT * FROM Customer ORDER BY customername – Example 2: Displays sales rep sorted by Lastname then Firstname SELECT * FROM Rep ORDER BY Lastname, Firstname – Example 3: Displays sales rep sorted by Lastname in descending order SELECT * FROM Rep ORDER BY Lastname DESC – Example 4: Displays customer sorted by City whose Credit Limit is $10,000 SELECT * FROM Customer WHERE CreditLimit = 10000 ORDER BY city 41 Non-Graded Exercise 1. Show all products from Item table and sort it according to Description 2. Show all products from Item table and sort it according to Storehouse and then Description 3. Show all products ordered from Orderline table and sort it according to Number of product ordered and in Descending order 42 Graded Exercise No. 2 Check-up Time 43 Built-in Functions • Built-in functions (aggregate functions) in SQL – COUNT: calculates number of entries – SUM or AVG: calculates sum or average of all entries in a given column – MAX or MIN: calculates largest or smallest values respectively 44 Using Aggregate Functions (COUNT, SUM, AVG, MAX, MIN) – Example 1: Count all how many customers in Customer table SELECT COUNT(*) as CustomerCount FROM Customer – Example 2: Count how many customers from the City of Grove SELECT COUNT(*) as CountGrove FROM Customer WHERE city = ‘Grove’ – Example 3: Sum all Balance from all Customers SELECT SUM(Balance) as TotalBalance FROM Customer – Example 4: Sum all Balance from all Customers for those who a CreditLimit of $5,000 SELECT SUM(Balance) as TotalBalance FROM Customer WHERE CreditLimit=5000 45 Non-Graded Exercise 1. Count all the products from Item table 2. Count all the products from Item table whose Category is either ‘TOY’ or ‘GME’ 3. Give the Total for the Quantity On Hand from Item table 4. Give the Sum or Total for the Quoted Price from Orderline table 5. Give the Sum or Total for the Quoted Price from Orderline table whose Quoted Price is above $400 46 Subqueries • Subquery: inner query • Subquery is evaluated first • Outer query is evaluated after the subquery 47 Using Subquery – Example 1: Select orders where whose parts/products are from Warehouse No. 3 SELECT Ordernum FROM Orderline WHERE Partnum IN (SELECT Partnum FROM Part WHERE Warehouse = ‘3’) 48 Graded Exercise No. 3 Check-up Time 49 Grouping • Create groups of records that share a common characteristic • GROUP BY clause indicates grouping in SQL • HAVING clause is to groups what the WHERE clause is to rows 50 Using GROUP BY – Example 1: Count how many customers per Sales Representative SELECT Repnum, COUNT(*) as TotalCustomersPerRep FROM Customer GROUP BY Repnum – Example 2: Get the Total of how much Quantity on Hand per Class of all the products SELECT Category, SUM(OnHand) as TotalPerCategory FROM Item GROUP BY Category 51 Using HAVING – Example 2: Get the Total of how much Quantity on Hand per Class of all products that have Quantity on hand above 70 SELECT Category, SUM(OnHand) as TotalPerCategory FROM Item GROUP BY Class HAVING SUM(OnHand) > 120 52 Non-Graded Exercise 1. Using subquery show orders from Orderline table that has a Category of ‘GME’ in Item table 2. Count all customers from Customer table per City. 3. Sum all Quantity on Hand from Item table per Storehouse. 4. Display the Sum of Quantity on Hand from Item table per Storehouse that has Total Quantity on hand above 200. 53 Joining Tables • • • Queries can locate data from more than one table Enter appropriate conditions in the WHERE clause To join tables, construct the SQL command as: 1. SELECT clause: list all fields you want to display 2. FROM clause: list all tables involved in the query 3. WHERE clause: give the condition that will restrict the data to be retrieved to only those rows from the two tables that match 4. Or you could use INNER JOIN in same manner as no. 3 54 Joining tables example – Example 1: Joining tables using WHERE clause SELECT CustomerNum, CustomerName, Rep.Repnum, Lastname, Firstname FROM Customer, Rep WHERE Customer.Repnum = Rep.Repnum – Example 2: Joining tables using INNER JOIN SELECT A.CustomerNum, A.CustomerName, B.Repnum, B.Lastname, B.Firstname FROM Customer A INNER JOIN Rep B ON A.Repnum = B.Repnum 55 Non-Graded Exercise 1. Using WHERE clause join Orderline and Item tables showing Ordernum from Orderline table then Itemnum and Description from Item table 2. Using INNER JOIN, join Orderline and Item tables showing Ordernum from Orderline table then Itemnum and Description from Item table 56 Graded Exercise No. 4 Check-up Time 57 Updating Tables • UPDATE command makes changes to existing data • INSERT command adds new data to a table • DELETE command deletes data from the database 58 Updating Table using UPDATE command – Example 1: Updating one field UPDATE Customer SET City=‘Manila’ WHERE Customernum=‘386’ – Example 2: Updating more than one field UPDATE Rep SET Lastname=‘Doe’, Firstname=‘John’ WHERE Repnum=‘30’ – Example 3: Updating involving computation UPDATE Item SET OnHand=OnHand-1 WHERE Storehouse=‘2’ 59 Non-Graded Exercise 1. Using update command from Customer table restore back the City of Customernum = ‘386’ from Manila to Northfield 2. Using update command from Rep table restore back the Firstname and Lastname of Sales Rep John Doe to Gradey Megan whose Repnum = ‘30’ 3. Using update command restore back from Item table to OnHand quantity plus 1 this time whose Storehouse = ‘2’ 60 Updating Table using INSERT command – Example 1: Inserting a record involving all fields INSERT INTO Item VALUES (‘TH01',‘Thomas and Friends Train',50,‘TOY',‘2',35.50) – Example 2: Inserting a record involving specific fields INSERT INTO Item (Itemnum, Description,Category,Price) VALUES (‘BL10',‘Bible Puzzle',‘PZL',25.00) 61 Non-Graded Exercise 1. Insert a record into Rep table but put your own data. 2. Insert a record into Rep table but using only Repnum, Lastname, Firstname, Commission and Rate fields. 62 Creating a Table from a Query • INTO clause – Saves the results of a query as a table – Specified before FROM and WHERE clauses • MySQL – Create the new table using a CREATE TABLE command – Use an INSERT command to insert the appropriate data into the new table 63 Creating a Table from a Query (continued) FIGURE 3-60a: Query to create a new table (Access) 64 Creating a Table from a Query (continued) FIGURE 3-60b: Query to create a new table (for Oracle and MySQL) 65 Summary of SQL Commands • Generic versions of SQL commands for every example presented in this chapter • In most cases, commands in Access are identical to the generic versions • For those commands that differ, both the generic version and the Access version are included 66 Summary • Structured Query Language (SQL) is a language that is used to manipulate relational databases • Basic form of an SQL query: SELECT-FROMWHERE • Use CREATE TABLE command to describe table layout to the DBMS, which creates the table • In SQL retrieval commands, fields are listed after SELECT, tables are listed after FROM, and conditions are listed after WHERE • In conditions, character values must be enclosed in single quotation marks 67 Summary (continued) • Compound conditions are formed by combining simple conditions using either or both of the following operators: AND and OR • Sorting is accomplished using ORDER BY clause • When the data is sorted in more than one field, can have a major and minor sort key • Grouping: use the GROUP BY clause • HAVING clause: restricts the rows to be displayed 68 Summary (continued) • Joining tables: use a condition that relates matching rows in the tables to be joined • Built-in (aggregate) functions: COUNT, SUM, AVG, MAX, and MIN • One SQL query can be placed inside another; the subquery is evaluated first • UNION operator: unifies the results of two queries 69 Summary (continued) • Calculated fields: include the calculation, the word AS, the name of the calculated field • INSERT command adds a new row to a table • UPDATE command changes existing data • DELETE command deletes records • INTO clause is used in a SELECT command to create a table containing the results of the query 70