Friday, 7 July 2017

SQL WHERE

SQL WHERE Clause

The WHERE clause is used to filter records.


The WHERE Clause 

The WHERE clause is used to extract only those records that fulfill a specified criterion.

SQL WHERE Syntax

SELECT column_name(s)
FROM table_name
WHERE column_name operator value



WHERE Clause Example

The "Persons" table:

P_Id
LastName
FirstName
Address
City
1
Hansen
Ola
Timoteivn 10
Sandnes
2
Svendson
Tove
Borgvn 23
Sandnes
3
Pettersen
Kari
Storgt 20
Stavanger
Now we want to select only the persons living in the city "Sandnes" from the table above.
We use the following SELECT statement:

SELECT * FROM Persons
WHERE City='Sandnes'
The result-set will look like this:

P_Id
LastName
FirstName
Address
City
1
Hansen
Ola
Timoteivn 10
Sandnes
2
Svendson
Tove
Borgvn 23
Sandnes



Quotes Around Text Fields

SQL uses single quotes around text values (most database systems will also accept double quotes).
Although, numeric values should not be enclosed in quotes.
For text values:

This is correct:

SELECT * FROM Persons WHERE FirstName='Tove'

This is wrong:

SELECT * FROM Persons WHERE FirstName=Tove
For numeric values:

This is correct:

SELECT * FROM Persons WHERE Year=1965

This is wrong:

SELECT * FROM Persons WHERE Year='1965'



Operators Allowed in the WHERE Clause

With the WHERE clause, the following operators can be used:

Operator
Description
=
Equal
<> 
Not equal
Greater than
Less than
>=
Greater than or equal
<=
Less than or equal
BETWEEN
Between an inclusive range
LIKE
Search for a pattern
IN
If you know the exact value you want to return for at least one of the columns
Note: In some versions of SQL the <> operator may be written as !=

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