SQL – Structured Query Language
CSC 310 – Database Design
SQL Introduction
- SQL stands for Structured Query Language
- It is an American National Standard Institute (ANSI)
standard computer language for accessing and
manipulating database systems.
- It is used for managing data in RDBMS which stores data
in the form of tables and relationship between data is also
stored in the form of tables.
- SQL statements are used to retrieve and update data in a
database.
SQL
• Data Definition Language (DDL)
– Create/alter/delete tables and their attributes
– Following lectures...
• Data Manipulation Language (DML)
– Query one or more tables – discussed next !
– Insert/delete/modify tuples in tables
Review on Database Design
EXERCISE
• Develop the Entity Relationship Model to
keep tracking of students attending lectures
• Transform the design into Relational
Database Schema.
Table name Attribute names
Tables in SQL
Product
PName Price Category Manufacturer
Gizmo $19.99 Gadgets GizmoWorks
Powergizmo $29.99 Gadgets GizmoWorks
SingleTouch $149.99 Photography Canon
MultiTouch $203.99 Household Hitachi
Tuples or rows
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)
Data Types in SQL
• Atomic types:
– Characters: CHAR(20), VARCHAR(50)
– Numbers: INT, BIGINT, SMALLINT, FLOAT
– Others: MONEY, DATETIME, …
• Every attribute must have an atomic type
– Hence tables are flat
– Why ?
Tables Explained
• A tuple = a record
– Restriction: all attributes are of atomic type
• A table = a set of tuples
– Like a list…
– …but it is unorderd:
no first(), no next(), no last().
SQL Query
Basic form: (plus many many more bells and whistles)
SELECT <attributes>
FROM <one or more relations>
WHERE <conditions>
Simple SQL Query
Product PName Price Category Manufacturer
Gizmo $19.99 Gadgets GizmoWorks
Powergizmo $29.99 Gadgets GizmoWorks
SingleTouch $149.99 Photography Canon
MultiTouch $203.99 Household Hitachi
SELECT *
FROM Product
WHERE category=‘Gadgets’
PName Price Category Manufacturer
Gizmo $19.99 Gadgets GizmoWorks
“selection” Powergizmo $29.99 Gadgets GizmoWorks
Simple SQL Query
Product PName Price Category Manufacturer
Gizmo $19.99 Gadgets GizmoWorks
Powergizmo $29.99 Gadgets GizmoWorks
SingleTouch $149.99 Photography Canon
MultiTouch $203.99 Household Hitachi
SELECT PName, Price, Manufacturer
FROM Product
WHERE Price > 100
PName Price Manufacturer
“selection” and SingleTouch $149.99 Canon
“projection” MultiTouch $203.99 Hitachi
Notation
Input Schema
Product(PName, Price, Category, Manfacturer)
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
The LIKE operator
SELECT *
FROM Products
WHERE PName LIKE ‘%gizmo%’
• s LIKE p: pattern matching on strings
• p may contain two special symbols:
– % = any sequence of characters
– _ = any single character
Eliminating Duplicates
Category
SELECT DISTINCT category Gadgets
FROM Product Photography
Household
Compare to:
Category
Gadgets
SELECT category Gadgets
FROM Product Photography
Household
Ordering the Results
SELECT pname, price, manufacturer
FROM Product
WHERE category=‘gizmo’ AND price > 50
ORDER BY price, pname
Ties are broken by the second attribute on the ORDER BY list, etc.
Ordering is ascending, unless you specify the DESC keyword.
PName Price Category Manufacturer
Gizmo $19.99 Gadgets GizmoWorks
Powergizmo $29.99 Gadgets GizmoWorks
SingleTouch $149.99 Photography Canon
MultiTouch $203.99 Household Hitachi
SELECT DISTINCT category
FROM Product
ORDER BY category ?
SELECT Category
FROM Product
ORDER BY PName
?
SELECT DISTINCT category
FROM Product
ORDER BY PName
?
Keys and Foreign Keys
Company
CName StockPrice Country
GizmoWorks 25 USA
Key
Canon 65 Japan
Hitachi 15 Japan
Product
PName Price Category Manufacturer
Foreign
Gizmo $19.99 Gadgets GizmoWorks
key
Powergizmo $29.99 Gadgets GizmoWorks
SingleTouch $149.99 Photography Canon
MultiTouch $203.99 Household Hitachi
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
SELECT PName, Price and Company
FROM Product, Company
WHERE Manufacturer=CName AND Country=‘Japan’
AND Price <= 200
Joins
Product Company
PName Price Category Manufacturer Cname StockPrice Country
Gizmo $19.99 Gadgets GizmoWorks GizmoWorks 25 USA
Powergizmo $29.99 Gadgets GizmoWorks Canon 65 Japan
SingleTouch $149.99 Photography Canon Hitachi 15 Japan
MultiTouch $203.99 Household Hitachi
SELECT PName, Price
FROM Product, Company
WHERE Manufacturer=CName AND Country=‘Japan’
AND Price <= 200 PName Price
SingleTouch $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
A Subtlety about Joins
Product (pname, price, category, manufacturer)
Company (cname, stockPrice, country)
Find all countries that manufacture some product in the
‘Gadgets’ category.
SELECT Country
FROM Product, Company
WHERE Manufacturer=CName AND Category=‘Gadgets’
Unexpected duplicates
A Subtlety about Joins
Product Company
Name Price Category Manufacturer Cname StockPrice Country
Gizmo $19.99 Gadgets GizmoWorks GizmoWorks 25 USA
Powergizmo $29.99 Gadgets GizmoWorks Canon 65 Japan
SingleTouch $149.99 Photography Canon Hitachi 15 Japan
MultiTouch $203.99 Household Hitachi
SELECT Country
FROM Product, Company
WHERE Manufacturer=CName AND Category=‘Gadgets’
Country
What is ??
the problem ? ??
What’s the
solution ?
Tuple Variables
Person(pname, address, worksfor)
Company(cname, address)
Which
SELECT DISTINCT pname, address address ?
FROM Person, Company
WHERE worksfor = cname
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
Meaning (Semantics) of SQL
Queries
SELECT a1, a2, …, ak
FROM R1 AS x1, R2 AS x2, …, Rn AS xn
WHERE Conditions
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 ?
Subqueries Returning Relations
Company(name, city)
Product(pname, maker)
Purchase(id, product, buyer)
Return cities where one can find companies that manufacture
products bought by Joe Blow
SELECT Company.city
FROM Company
WHERE Company.name IN
(SELECT Product.maker
FROM Purchase , Product
WHERE Product.pname=Purchase.product
AND Purchase .buyer = ‘Joe Blow‘);
Subqueries Returning Relations
Is it equivalent to this ?
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 Now
FROM Company, Product, Purchase
they are
WHERE Company.name= Product.maker equivalent
AND Product.pname = Purchase.product
AND Purchase.buyer = ‘Joe Blow’
Subqueries Returning Relations
You can also use: s > ALL R
s > ANY R
EXISTS R
Product ( pname, price, category, maker)
Find products that are more expensive than all those produced
By “Gizmo-Works”
SELECT name
FROM Product
WHERE price > ALL (SELECT price
FROM Purchase
WHERE maker=‘Gizmo-Works’)
Question for Database Fans
and their Friends
• Can we express this query as a single
SELECT-FROM-WHERE query, without
subqueries ?
Question for Database Fans
and their Friends
• Answer: all SFW queries are
monotone (figure out what this means).
A query with ALL is not monotone
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
Complex Correlated Query
Product ( pname, price, category, maker, year)
• Find products (and their manufacturers) that are more expensive
than all products made by the same manufacturer before 1972
SELECT DISTINCT pname, maker
FROM Product AS x
WHERE price > ALL (SELECT price
FROM Product AS y
WHERE x.maker = y.maker AND y.year < 1972);
Very powerful ! Also much harder to optimize.
Aggregation
SELECT avg(price) SELECT count(*)
FROM Product FROM Product
WHERE maker=“Toyota” WHERE year > 1995
SQL supports several aggregation operations:
sum, count, min, max, avg
Except count, all aggregations apply to a single attribute
Aggregation: Count
COUNT applies to duplicates, unless otherwise stated:
SELECT Count(category) same as Count(*)
FROM Product
WHERE year > 1995
We probably want:
SELECT Count(DISTINCT category)
FROM Product
WHERE year > 1995
More Examples
Purchase(product, date, price, quantity)
SELECT Sum(price * quantity)
FROM Purchase
What do
they mean ?
SELECT Sum(price * quantity)
FROM Purchase
WHERE product = ‘bagel’
Purchase
Simple Aggregations
Product Date Price Quantity
Bagel 10/21 1 20
Banana 10/3 0.5 10
Banana 10/10 1 10
Bagel 10/25 1.50 20
SELECT Sum(price * quantity)
FROM Purchase 50 (= 20+30)
WHERE product = ‘bagel’
Grouping and Aggregation
Purchase(product, date, price, quantity)
Find total sales after 10/1/2005 per product.
SELECT product, Sum(price*quantity) AS TotalSales
FROM Purchase
WHERE date > ‘10/1/2005’
GROUP BY product
Let’s see what this means…
Grouping and Aggregation
1. Compute the FROM and WHERE clauses.
2. Group by the attributes in the GROUPBY
3. Compute the SELECT clause: grouped attributes and aggregates.
1&2. FROM-WHERE-GROUPBY
Product Date Price Quantity
Bagel 10/21 1 20
Bagel 10/25 1.50 20
Banana 10/3 0.5 10
Banana 10/10 1 10
3. SELECT
Product Date Price Quantity Product TotalSales
Bagel 10/21 1 20
Bagel 10/25 1.50 20 Bagel 50
Banana 10/3 0.5 10
Banana 10/10 1 10
Banana 15
SELECT product, Sum(price*quantity) AS TotalSales
FROM Purchase
WHERE date > ‘10/1/2005’
GROUP BY product
GROUP BY v.s. Nested Quereis
SELECT product, Sum(price*quantity) AS TotalSales
FROM Purchase
WHERE date > ‘10/1/2005’
GROUP BY product
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.
General form of Grouping and
Aggregation
SELECT S
FROM R1,…,Rn
WHERE C1
GROUP BY a1,…,ak Why ?
HAVING C2
S = may contain attributes a1,…,ak and/or any aggregates but NO OTHER
ATTRIBUTES
C1 = is any condition on the attributes in R1,…,Rn
C2 = is any condition on aggregate expressions
General form of Grouping and
Aggregation
SELECT S
FROM R1,…,Rn
WHERE C1
GROUP BY a1,…,ak
HAVING C2
Evaluation steps:
1. Evaluate FROM-WHERE, apply condition C1
2. Group by the attributes a1,…,ak
3. Apply condition C2 to each group (may have aggregates)
4. Compute aggregates in S and return the result
Advanced SQLizing
1. Getting around INTERSECT and EXCEPT
2. Quantifiers
3. Aggregation v.s. subqueries
INTERSECT and EXCEPT: not in SQL Server
1. INTERSECT and EXCEPT: If R, S have no
duplicates, then can
write without
subqueries
(SELECT R.A, R.B SELECT R.A, R.B (HOW ?)
FROM R) FROM R
INTERSECT WHERE
(SELECT S.A, S.B EXISTS(SELECT *
FROM S) FROM S
WHERE R.A=S.A and R.B=S.B)
(SELECT R.A, R.B SELECT R.A, R.B
FROM R) FROM R
EXCEPT WHERE
(SELECT S.A, S.B NOT EXISTS(SELECT *
FROM S) 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
3. Group-by v.s. Nested Query
Author(login,name)
Wrote(login,url)
• Find authors who wrote 10 documents: This is
• Attempt 1: with nested queries SQL by
a novice
SELECT DISTINCT Author.name
FROM Author
WHERE count(SELECT Wrote.url
FROM Wrote
WHERE Author.login=Wrote.login)
> 10
3. Group-by v.s. Nested Query
• Find all authors who wrote at least 10
documents:
• Attempt 2: SQL style (with GROUP BY)
SELECT Author.name This is
FROM Author, Wrote SQL by
WHERE Author.login=Wrote.login an expert
GROUP BY Author.name
HAVING count(wrote.url) > 10
No need for DISTINCT: automatically from GROUP BY
3. Group-by v.s. Nested Query
Author(login,name)
Wrote(login,url)
Mentions(url,word)
Find authors with vocabulary 10000 words:
SELECT Author.name
FROM Author, Wrote, Mentions
WHERE Author.login=Wrote.login AND Wrote.url=Mentions.url
GROUP BY Author.name
HAVING count(distinct Mentions.word) > 10000
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 Why both ?
GROUP BY Store.sid, Store.name
HAVING 100 < min(Product.price)
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)
For each store,
find its most expensive product
Two Examples
This is easy but doesn’t 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
But may WHERE Store.sid = x.sid and
return x.price >=
multiple ALL (SELECT y.price
product names FROM Product y
per store 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 don’t 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 = 0
UNKNOWN = 0.5
TRUE = 1
Null Values
• C1 AND C2 = min(C1, C2)
• C1 OR C2 = max(C1, C2)
• NOT C1 = 1 – C1
SELECT * E.g.
FROM Person age=20
WHERE (age < 25) AND heigth=NULL
weight=200
(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 JOIN Purchase ON
Product.name = Purchase.prodName
Same as: 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 Purchase
Name Category ProdName Store
Gizmo gadget Gizmo Wiz
Camera Photo Camera Ritz
OneClick Photo Camera Wiz
Name Store
Gizmo Wiz
Camera Ritz
Camera Wiz
OneClick NULL
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
What’s 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 there’s no match
• Right outer join:
– Include the right tuple even if there’s no match
• Full outer join:
– Include the both left and right tuples even if there’s no
match
Modifying the Database
Three kinds of modifications
• Insertions
• Deletions
• Updates
Sometimes they are all called “updates”
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
Suppose database got corrupted and we need to fix it:
Purchase
Product
prodName buyerName price
name listPrice category
camera John 200
gizmo 100 gadgets gizmo Smith 80
camera Smith 225
Task: insert in Product all prodNames from Purchase
Insertion: an Example
INSERT INTO Product(name)
SELECT DISTINCT prodName
FROM Purchase
WHERE prodName NOT IN (SELECT name FROM Product)
name listPrice category
gizmo 100 Gadgets
camera - -
Insertion: an Example
INSERT INTO Product(name, listPrice)
SELECT DISTINCT prodName, price
FROM Purchase
WHERE prodName NOT IN (SELECT name FROM Product)
name listPrice category
gizmo 100 Gadgets
camera 200 -
camera ?? 225 ?? - Depends on the implementation
Deletions
Example:
DELETE FROM PURCHASE
WHERE seller = ‘Joe’ AND
product = ‘Brooklyn Bridge’
Factoid about SQL: there is no way to delete only a single
occurrence of a tuple that appears twice
in a relation.
Updates
Example:
UPDATE PRODUCT
SET price = price/2
WHERE Product.name IN
(SELECT product
FROM Purchase
WHERE Date =‘Oct, 25, 1999’);