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M.P. Johnson, DBMS, Stern/NYU, Spring 20081 C20.0046: Database Management Systems Lecture #9 M.P. Johnson Stern School of Business, NYU Spring, 2008.

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Presentation on theme: "M.P. Johnson, DBMS, Stern/NYU, Spring 20081 C20.0046: Database Management Systems Lecture #9 M.P. Johnson Stern School of Business, NYU Spring, 2008."— Presentation transcript:

1 M.P. Johnson, DBMS, Stern/NYU, Spring 20081 C20.0046: Database Management Systems Lecture #9 M.P. Johnson Stern School of Business, NYU Spring, 2008

2 M.P. Johnson, DBMS, Stern/NYU, Spring 2008 2 Agenda Subqueries, etc. Sets, etc.

3 M.P. Johnson, DBMS, Stern/NYU, Spring 2008 3 From last time: escaping single quotes http://reddit.com/info/69jzv/comments/

4 M.P. Johnson, DBMS, Stern/NYU, Spring 2008 4 Subqueries Subquery: copy in Conrad’s selection for his ssn: The subquery returns one value, so the = is valid If it returns more (or fewer), we get a run-time error SELECT Purchase.prodname FROM Purchase WHERE buyerssn = (SELECT ssn FROM Person WHERE name = 'Christo') SELECT Purchase.prodname FROM Purchase WHERE buyerssn = (SELECT ssn FROM Person WHERE name = 'Christo')

5 M.P. Johnson, DBMS, Stern/NYU, Spring 2008 5 Operators on subqueries Several new operators applied to (unary) selections: 1. IN R 2. EXISTS R 3. UNIQUE R 4. s > ALL R 5. s > ANY R 6. x IN R > is just an example op Each expression can be negated with NOT

6 M.P. Johnson, DBMS, Stern/NYU, Spring 2008 6 Next: ALL op Employees(name, job, divid, salary) Find which employees are paid more than all the programmers SELECT name FROM Employees WHERE salary > ALL (SELECT salary FROM Employees WHERE job='programmer') SELECT name FROM Employees WHERE salary > ALL (SELECT salary FROM Employees WHERE job='programmer')

7 M.P. Johnson, DBMS, Stern/NYU, Spring 2008 7 ANY/SOME op Employees(name, job, divid, salary) Find which employees are paid more than at least one vice president SELECT name FROM Employees WHERE salary > ANY (SELECT salary FROM Employees WHERE job='VP') SELECT name FROM Employees WHERE salary > ANY (SELECT salary FROM Employees WHERE job='VP')

8 M.P. Johnson, DBMS, Stern/NYU, Spring 2008 8 ANY/SOME op Employees(name, job, divid, salary) Find which employees are paid more than at least one vice president SELECT name FROM Employees WHERE salary > SOME (SELECT salary FROM Employees WHERE job='VP') SELECT name FROM Employees WHERE salary > SOME (SELECT salary FROM Employees WHERE job='VP')

9 M.P. Johnson, DBMS, Stern/NYU, Spring 2008 9 Existential/Universal Conditions Employees(name, job, divid, salary) Division(name, id, head) Find all divisions with an employee whose salary is > 100000 Existential: easy! SELECT DISTINCT Division.name FROM Employees, Division WHERE salary > 100000 AND divid=id SELECT DISTINCT Division.name FROM Employees, Division WHERE salary > 100000 AND divid=id

10 M.P. Johnson, DBMS, Stern/NYU, Spring 2008 10 Existential/Universal Conditions Employees(name, job, divid, salary) Division(name, id, head) Find all divisions in which everyone makes > 100000 Existential: easy!

11 M.P. Johnson, DBMS, Stern/NYU, Spring 2008 11 Existential/universal with IN 2. Select the divisions we didn’t find: 1. Find the other divisions: in which someone makes <= 100000: SELECT name FROM Division WHERE id IN (SELECT divid FROM Employees WHERE salary <= 100000 SELECT name FROM Division WHERE id IN (SELECT divid FROM Employees WHERE salary <= 100000 SELECT name FROM Division WHERE id NOT IN (SELECT divid FROM Employees WHERE salary <= 100000 SELECT name FROM Division WHERE id NOT IN (SELECT divid FROM Employees WHERE salary <= 100000

12 M.P. Johnson, DBMS, Stern/NYU, Spring 2008 12 Next: correlated subqueries Acc(name,bal,type…) Q: Who has the largest balance? Can we do this with subqueries?

13 M.P. Johnson, DBMS, Stern/NYU, Spring 2008 13 Acc(name,bal,type,…) Q: Find holder of largest account SELECT name FROM Acc WHERE bal >= ALL (SELECT bal FROM Acc) SELECT name FROM Acc WHERE bal >= ALL (SELECT bal FROM Acc) Correlated Queries

14 M.P. Johnson, DBMS, Stern/NYU, Spring 2008 14 Correlated Queries So far, subquery executed once;  result used for higher query More complicated: correlated queries “[T]he subquery… [is] evaluated many times, once for each assignment of a value to some term in the subquery that comes from a tuple variable outside the subquery” (Ullman, p286). Q: What does this mean? A: That subqueries refer to vars from outer queries

15 M.P. Johnson, DBMS, Stern/NYU, Spring 2008 15 Acc(name,bal,type,…) Q2: Find holder of largest account of each type SELECT name, type FROM Acc WHERE bal >= ALL (SELECT bal FROM Acc WHERE type=type) SELECT name, type FROM Acc WHERE bal >= ALL (SELECT bal FROM Acc WHERE type=type) Correlated Queries correlation

16 M.P. Johnson, DBMS, Stern/NYU, Spring 2008 16 Acc(name,bal,type,…) Q2: Find holder of largest account of each type Note: 1. scope of variables 2. this can still be expressed as single SFW SELECT name, type FROM Acc a1 WHERE bal >= ALL (SELECT bal FROM Acc WHERE type=a1.type) SELECT name, type FROM Acc a1 WHERE bal >= ALL (SELECT bal FROM Acc WHERE type=a1.type) Correlated Queries correlation

17 M.P. Johnson, DBMS, Stern/NYU, Spring 2008 17 New topic: R.A./SQL Set Operators Relations are sets  have set-theoretic ops  Venn diagrams Union: R1  R2 Example:  ActiveEmployees  RetiredEmployees Difference: R1 – R2 Example:  AllEmployees – RetiredEmployees = ActiveEmployees Intersection: R1  R2 Example:  RetiredEmployees  UnionizedEmployees

18 M.P. Johnson, DBMS, Stern/NYU, Spring 2008 18 Set operations - example NameAddressGenderBirthdate Fisher123 MapleF9/9/99 Hamill456 OakM8/8/88 NameAddressGenderBirthdate Fisher123 MapleF9/9/99 Ford345 PalmM7/7/77 R: S: NameAddressGenderBirthdate Fisher123 MapleF9/9/99 Hamill456 OakM8/8/88 Ford345 PalmM7/7/77 R  S:

19 M.P. Johnson, DBMS, Stern/NYU, Spring 2008 19 Set operations - example NameAddressGenderBirthdate Fisher123 MapleF9/9/99 Hamill456 OakM8/8/88 NameAddressGenderBirthdate Fisher123 MapleF9/9/99 Ford345 PalmM7/7/77 R: S: R  S: NameAddressGenderBirthdate Fisher123 MapleF9/9/99

20 M.P. Johnson, DBMS, Stern/NYU, Spring 2008 20 Set operations - example NameAddressGenderBirthdate Fisher123 MapleF9/9/99 Hamill456 OakM8/8/88 NameAddressGenderBirthdate Fisher123 MapleF9/9/99 Ford345 PalmM7/7/77 R: S: R - S: NameAddressGenderBirthdate Hamill456 OakM8/8/88

21 M.P. Johnson, DBMS, Stern/NYU, Spring 2008 21 Set ops in SQL Orthodox SQL has set operators:  UNION, INTERSECT, EXCEPT  Oracle SQL uses MINUS rather than EXCEPT  See the Ullman page on more differencesUllman These ops applied to queries: (SELECT name FROM Person WHERE City = 'New York') INTERSECT (SELECT custname FROM Purchase WHERE store='Kim''s') (SELECT name FROM Person WHERE City = 'New York') INTERSECT (SELECT custname FROM Purchase WHERE store='Kim''s')

22 M.P. Johnson, DBMS, Stern/NYU, Spring 2008 22 Boat examples Reserve(ssn,bmodel,color) Q: Find ssns of sailors who reserved red boats or green boats SELECT DISTINCT ssn FROM reserve WHERE color = 'red' OR color = 'green' SELECT DISTINCT ssn FROM reserve WHERE color = 'red' OR color = 'green'

23 M.P. Johnson, DBMS, Stern/NYU, Spring 2008 23 Boat examples Reserve(ssn,bmodel,color) Q: Find ssns of sailors who reserved red boats and green boats SELECT DISTINCT ssn FROM reserve WHERE color = 'red' AND color = 'green' SELECT DISTINCT ssn FROM reserve WHERE color = 'red' AND color = 'green'

24 M.P. Johnson, DBMS, Stern/NYU, Spring 2008 24 Boat examples Reserve(ssn,bmodel,color) Q: Find ssns of sailors who reserved red boats and green boats SELECT DISTINCT r1.ssn FROM reserve r1, reserve r2 WHERE r1.ssn = r2.ssn AND r1.color = 'red' AND r2.color = 'green' SELECT DISTINCT r1.ssn FROM reserve r1, reserve r2 WHERE r1.ssn = r2.ssn AND r1.color = 'red' AND r2.color = 'green'

25 M.P. Johnson, DBMS, Stern/NYU, Spring 2008 25 Boat examples Reserve(ssn,bmodel,color) Q: Find ssns of sailors who reserved red boats and green boats (SELECT DISTINCT ssn FROM reserve WHERE color = 'red') INTERSECT(SELECT DISTINCT ssn FROM reserve WHERE color = 'green') (SELECT DISTINCT ssn FROM reserve WHERE color = 'red') INTERSECT(SELECT DISTINCT ssn FROM reserve WHERE color = 'green')

26 M.P. Johnson, DBMS, Stern/NYU, Spring 2008 26 Boat examples Reserve(ssn,bmodel,color) Q: Find ssns of sailors who reserved red boats or green boats (SELECT DISTINCT ssn FROM reserve WHERE color = 'red') UNION (SELECT DISTINCT ssn FROM reserve WHERE color = 'green') (SELECT DISTINCT ssn FROM reserve WHERE color = 'red') UNION (SELECT DISTINCT ssn FROM reserve WHERE color = 'green')

27 M.P. Johnson, DBMS, Stern/NYU, Spring 2008 27 Boat examples Reserve(ssn,bmodel,color) Q: Find ssns of sailors who reserved red boats but not green boats (SELECT DISTINCT ssn FROM reserve WHERE color = 'red') EXCEPT (SELECT DISTINCT ssn FROM reserve WHERE color = 'green') (SELECT DISTINCT ssn FROM reserve WHERE color = 'red') EXCEPT (SELECT DISTINCT ssn FROM reserve WHERE color = 'green')

28 M.P. Johnson, DBMS, Stern/NYU, Spring 2008 28 (SELECT name, address FROM Cust1) UNION (SELECT name FROM Cust2) (SELECT name, address FROM Cust1) UNION (SELECT name FROM Cust2) Union-Compatibility Situation: Cust1(name,address,…), Cust2(name,…) Want: report of all customer names and addresses (if known) Can’t do: Both tables must have same sequence of types  Applies to all set ops

29 M.P. Johnson, DBMS, Stern/NYU, Spring 2008 29 Union-Compatibility Situation: Cust1(name,address,…), Cust2(name,…) Want: report of all customer names and addresses (if known) But can do: Resulting field names taken from first table (SELECT name, address FROM Cust1) UNION (SELECT name, '(N/A)' FROM Cust2) (SELECT name, address FROM Cust1) UNION (SELECT name, '(N/A)' FROM Cust2) Result(name, address)

30 M.P. Johnson, DBMS, Stern/NYU, Spring 2008 30 First Unintuitive SQLism Looking for R  (S  T) But what happens if T is empty? See transcript of this in Oracle on salestranscript SELECTR.A FROM R, S, T WHERER.A=S.A OR R.A=T.A SELECTR.A FROM R, S, T WHERER.A=S.A OR R.A=T.A

31 M.P. Johnson, DBMS, Stern/NYU, Spring 2008 31 Review Examples from sqlzoo.netsqlzoo.net SELECT L FROM R 1, …, R n WHERE C SELECT L FROM R 1, …, R n WHERE C  L (  C (R 1 x … R n )


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