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IS6146 Databases for Management Information Systems Lecture 2: SQL II – Joins, Updates, Insertions, and Deletions Rob Gleasure robgleasure.com.

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Presentation on theme: "IS6146 Databases for Management Information Systems Lecture 2: SQL II – Joins, Updates, Insertions, and Deletions Rob Gleasure robgleasure.com."— Presentation transcript:

1 IS6146 Databases for Management Information Systems Lecture 2: SQL II – Joins, Updates, Insertions, and Deletions Rob Gleasure R.Gleasure@ucc.ie robgleasure.com

2 IS6146 Today’s session  More SQL Insert Into Update Delete Joins  Exercise

3 Continuous Assessment In-class SQL exam (20 marks)  17 th February Reports and presentations due  9 th March (reports) A soft-bound 2000 word report (20 marks)  9 th and 16 th March (presentations) A 10 minute in-class presentation (10 marks)

4 Report Go to the SXSW website for their 2015 Startup Spotlight Participants  http://www.sxsw.com/interactive/2015-startup-spotlighthttp://www.sxsw.com/interactive/2015-startup-spotlight  Pick a company and email me the name (no duplicates, first come-first served) that you want to use for your assignment Imagine* you have been brought in as eBusiness data consultants to review the data strategy for that startup. Your job is to  Briefly summarise the startup, their users, their value proposition, and their existing use of data (300-400 words, maximum)  Present an innovative new strategy that identifies new sources and uses of data capable of creating value  Identify key technologies that might be appropriate for implementing this new strategy

5 Groups The groups are as follows:  Group 1: Hartigan, Stephen John; Lu, Zicheng; Foley, Ciara Mary; Murphy, Richard;  Group 2: Li, Xiaochen;Ojo, Afolabi; O Brien, Patrick Anthony;  Group 3: Hayes, Brian James; Cofalik, Emilia Agnieszka; Liu, Yang;  Group 4: Kelleher, Shona; Murphy, Charles Francis;Curtin, Peter Laurence;  Group 5: Carey, Caroline; Wang, Pengcheng; Murphy, Laura;  Group 6: Aslam, Usman; Nolan, Ryan; Sullivan, Lee;  Group 7: Wang, Meng;Quirke, David; Wu, Jiahua;  Group 8: Lee, David James; Cahill, Liam; Ryan, Liam;

6 More on the SQL DML So far we’ve looked at getting data from specific tables, but there are still two parts of the Data Manipulation Language (DML) we haven’t covered The DML has four main elements  Select  Insert Into  Update  Delete Also, what if our data isn’t on one table?…

7 Insert Into We use INSERT INTO queries to add new tuples (aka records, rows) into a table The basic structure of an INSERT-INTO query is as follows INSERT INTO table_name1 (column_name1, column_name2, …) VALUES value1, value2, …;

8 Insert Into For example, say we want to insert a new student in a Students table with a Student_ID of 12345678 and a Name of “Jane Smith”, we might have the following INSERT INTO Students (Student_ID, Name) VALUES (12345678, “Jane Smith”) ; Note that we insert the data in the form of a new tuple (aka record, row) and if we do not specify a column, we have to provide data for each column in the new record Example http://www.w3schools.com/sql/trysql.asp?filename=trysql_insert_cols

9 Update We use UPDATE queries to modify existing tuples (aka records, rows) in a table The basic structure of an UPDATE query is as follows UPDATE table_name1, table_name2, … SET col_name1 = value1, col_name2 = value2, …; WHERE some_column=some_value;

10 Update For example, say we want to change the previously added student record to be “Janet Smith”, we might have the following UPDATE Students SET (Name = “Janet Smith”) WHERE (Student_ID=12345678) ; Careful with this, if you don’t set a WHERE condition you will change every record in the database Example http://www.w3schools.com/sql/trysql.asp?filename=trysql_update

11 Delete We use DELETE queries to remove existing tuples (aka records, rows) in a table The basic structure of a DELETE query is as follows DELETE FROM table_name WHERE some_column=some_value;

12 Delete For example, say we want to delete the previously added student record, we might have the following DELETE FROM Students WHERE (Name = “Janet Smith”); Again – be careful, if you don’t set a WHERE condition you delete every record in the database Example http://www.w3schools.com/sql/trysql.asp?filename=trysql_delete

13 Joins Joins combine tuples (aka rows, records) from multiple tables Joins come in several forms  Inner Joins  Left Joins  Right Joins  Full Joins  Unions  Select Into/Into Select

14 Inner Joins Inner Joins return the specified columns at the intersection of two or more tables Image from http://www.w3schools.com/

15 Inner Joins Inner Joins are the most basic (and probably most common) type of join The basic structure of an INNER JOIN query is as follows SELECT column_name(s) FROM table1 INNER JOIN table2 ON table1.column_name=table2.column_name;

16 Inner Joins For example, say in addition to the previously added student record, a separate REFERENCES table stores student details. We could retrieve Student_IDs included in both tables as follows: SELECT Students.Student_ID, Student.Name, References.Ref_Details FROM Students INNER JOIN References ON Students.Student_ID = References.Student_ID; Example http://www.w3schools.com/sql/trysql.asp?filename=trysql_select_join_inner

17 Left Joins Left Joins (sometimes called left outer joins) return all of the specified columns from the first table and their intersection (where it exists) with two or more tables Image from http://www.w3schools.com/

18 Left Joins The big difference here is that columns from our first table that have no corresponding entry in the latter tables are still returned (with null signifying the missing entry) The basic structure of an LEFT JOIN query is as follows SELECT column_name(s) FROM table1 LEFT JOIN table2 ON table1.column_name=table2.column_name;

19 Left Joins For example, what if some students do not have references and we still want to see their Student_ID and Name? We could retrieve these records as follows: SELECT Students.Student_ID, Student.Name, References.Ref_Details FROM Students LEFTJOIN References ON Students.Student_ID = References.Student_ID; Example http://www.w3schools.com/sql/trysql.asp?filename=trysql_select_join_left

20 Right Joins Right Joins (sometimes called right outer joins) return all of the specified columns from the latter tables and their intersection (where it exists) with the first table Image from http://www.w3schools.com/

21 Right Joins Here, columns from our latter tables that have no corresponding entry in the first tables are still returned (with null signifying the missing entry in the first table) The basic structure of an RIGHT JOIN query is as follows SELECT column_name(s) FROM table1 RIGHT JOIN table2 ON table1.column_name=table2.column_name;

22 Right Joins For example, what if some references have been received before the corresponding student records have been created and we still want to see them? We could retrieve these records as follows: SELECT Students.Student_ID, Student.Name, References.Ref_Details FROM Students RIGHT JOIN References ON Students.Student_ID = References.Student_ID; Example http://www.w3schools.com/sql/trysql.asp?filename=trysql_select_join_right& ss=-1

23 Full Outer Joins Full Outer Joins return all of the specified columns from the first and latter tables, including entries in either table with no corresponding table in the other(s) Image from http://www.w3schools.com/

24 Full Outer Joins Here, columns from our any table that have no corresponding entry in other tables are still returned (with null signifying the missing entry) The basic structure of an FULL OUTER JOIN query is as follows SELECT column_name(s) FROM table1 FULL OUTER JOIN table2 ON table1.column_name=table2.column_name;

25 Full Outer Joins For example, what if we want to see the full set of records to determine which student records we have not yet created and which references are still outstanding? We could retrieve these records as follows: SELECT Students.Student_ID, Student.Name, References.Ref_Details FROM Students FULL OUTER JOIN References ON Students.Student_ID = References.Student_ID;

26 Unions Unions are a bit different, they tend to be used for retrieving comprehensive sets of similar records Unions combine two or more SELECT queries, provided the following conditions are met  Each SELECT query must have the same number of columns  Each merged column must share data types  Columns in each SELECT query must be in the same order

27 Unions The basic structure of a UNION query is as follows SELECT column_name(s) FROM table1 UNION SELECT column_name(s) FROM table2; Note that this will automatically return only distinct records, though we can used UNION ALL if we want to include duplicates

28 Unions For example, what if our students table only stores enrolled students, whereas another Provisional_Students table stores students in provisional places awaiting confirmation? We could retrieve these records as follows: SELECT Name FROM Students UNION SELECT Name FROM Provisional_Students ORDER BY Name; Example http://www.w3schools.com/sql/trysql.asp?filename=trysql_select_union_all2

29 Select Into Sometimes we want to copy an entire schema into a new table. We can do this using SELECT INTO as follows SELECT column_name(s) INTO newtable FROM table1; This often ends up as a way of backing things up, e.g. SELECT * INTO Students_Backup FROM Students

30 Insert Into Select Alternatively, sometimes we want to add data from one table to an existing table. We can do this using INSERT INTO SELECT as follows INSERT INTO table2 (column_name(s)) SELECT column_name(s) FROM table1; Example http ://www.w3schools.com/sql/trysql.asp?filename=trysql_insert_into_select

31 Exercise Consider the following problems related to the Customers database, what queries best solve them? 1. We want to retrieve all customer addresses in Mexico? 2. We want to add a new Customer called 'Juan Garcia Ramos', with contact name 'Juan Ramos', address of 'Tribulete 4356', in the city 'México D.F', with a post code of '05029', in the country of 'Mexico‘? 3. We want to update that customer’s contact name to ‘Anna Ramos’? 4. We want to delete the same customer?

32 Exercise 5. We want to retrieve all cities mentioned in customer records and supplier records using a full outer join 6. We want to retrieve all cities mentioned in customer records and supplier records using a union 7. We want create e new Customer_Cities_Backup table storing all cities listed in the Customers table 8. We want to add all cities listed in the Suppliers table into the Customers table


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