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SQL Syntax

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Revision as of 19:31, 17 November 2011 by imported>Aeric (→‎SELECT Statement)

Here is the syntax for the SQL SELECT statement that the SQL parser recognizes.

Considerations
  • SQL syntax is case insensitive.
  • Field and table names are case sensitive
Legend
  • [ x ] - Optional (one or none)
  • [, x ... ] - Optional additional values, in a comma-separated list
  • x | y - Choose one. Curly braces are added when needed: { x | y } ...
  • CAPITALIZED - SQL Keyword (case insensitive)
  • italicized - Value you supply. (Table names and column names are case-sensitive)

SELECT Statement

In a select statement, you designate one more columns separated by commas (or "*" for all columns), plus a table or join to get the data from, and additional options:

Example
<syntaxhighlight lang="sql" enclose="div">

SELECT * FROM Customers </syntaxhighlight>

Syntax
SELECT
[DISTINCT]
[(] column_expr [, column_expr ...] [)]
FROM tables
[WHERE where_clause]
[GROUP BY col_name [ASC|DESC]  [, col_name [ASC|DESC] ...]
[WITH ROLLUP]
[HAVING where_clause]
]
[ORDER BY col_name [ASC|DESC]  [, col_name [ASC|DESC] ...]
[LIMIT {maximum_rows | offset, maximum_rows} ]

where:

DISTINCT
Eliminates duplicate rows from the result set.
For example: DISTINCT(customer_name, address)
(Parentheses are optional, but must be matched if present.)
HAVING
Is only allowed as part of GROUP BY, for performance reasons. (WHERE does the same thing outside of a GROUP BY clause, only more efficiently.)
ASC
Ascending (the default).
DESC
Descending.
maximum_rows
Maximum number of rows to return.
offset
The row to start from. Offset for the first row is zero (0).
Learn more:: MySQL Select Statement syntax

column_expr

*  |  table_alias.*  |  col_name [ [AS] col_alias ]  |  expr [AS] col_alias

where:

col_alias
Used for the column name in the result set in the SQL Browser, or for the tag name in the REST execSQL resource.
Required when an expression is specified.
Can be used as a field name in a group_by_clause or order_by_clause.
For example:
SELECT CONCAT(last_name,', ',first_name) AS full_name
FROM Customer_Contacts ORDER BY full_name;

tables

[(] table [, table ...] [)]

table

  table_name [ [AS] alias ]
| join_table

join_table

table [INNER | LEFT | RIGHT] JOIN tables
[ON on_clause]

on_clause

on_condition [ {AND|OR} on_condition ...]

on_condition

  table.col_name IS [NOT] NULL
| table.col_name = table.col_name
| table.col_name != table.col_name
| ( on_clause )

where:

  • table (name or alias) is required

where_clause

An expression that evaluates to true or false for a row. When true, the row is selected. The expression has the form:

condition [ {AND|OR} condition ...]

condition

  expr IS [NOT] NULL
| expr [NOT] LIKE wildcard_string
| expr [NOT] REGEXP pattern_string
| expr [NOT] IN (expr [, expr ...])
| expr = expr
| expr < expr
| expr > expr
| expr != expr
| expr <= expr
| expr >= expr

expr

  string
| number
| date/tim
| column_name
| SQL Function
| + expr
| - expr
| (expr [, expr ...] )

string

...

number

...

date/time

...

wildcard_string

...

pattern_string

...