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Structured Query Language is one of the most important languages used in the industry. It’s one of the most sought languages desired by the employers as the volume of data is increasing, in order to access the humongous data from respective databases, it is important to know this skill which would help you retrieve, update and manipulate data.
In this post, we will be covering all the solutions to **SQL on the HackerRank **platform. HackerRank is a platform for competitive coding. It is very important that you all first give it a try & brainstorm yourselves before having a look at the solutions. Let us code and find answers to our given problems.
I. Revising the Select Query 1
Query all columns for all American cities in CITY with populations larger than 100000
. The CountryCode for America is USA
.
Input Format
The CITY table is described as follows:
SELECT * FROM CITY WHERE COUNTRYCODE = ‘USA’ AND POPULATION > 100000;
II. Revising the Select Query 2
Query the names of all American cities in CITY with populations larger than 120000
. The CountryCode for America is USA
.
Input Format
The CITY table is described as follows:
SELECT NAME FROM CITY WHERE COUNTRYCODE = ‘USA’ AND POPULATION > 120000;
III. Select All
Query all columns (attributes) for every row in the CITY table.
Input Format
SELECT * FROM CITY;
IV. Select By ID
Query all columns for a city in CITY with the ID 1661
.
Input Format
SELECT * FROM CITY WHERE ID = 1661;
V. Japanese Cities’ Attributes
Query all attributes of every Japanese city in the CITY table. The COUNTRYCODE for Japan is JPN
.
Input Format
SELECT * FROM CITY WHERE COUNTRYCODE = ‘JPN’;
VI. Japanese Cities’ Names
Query the names of all the Japanese cities in the CITY table. The COUNTRYCODE for Japan is JPN
.
Input Format
SELECT NAME FROM CITY WHERE COUNTRYCODE = ‘JPN’;
VII. Weather Observation Station 1
Query a list of CITY and STATE from the STATION table.
Input Format
The STATION table is described as follows:
where LAT_N is the northern latitude and LONG_W is the western longitude.
SELECT CITY, STATE FROM STATION;
VIII. Weather Observation Station 3
Query a list of CITY names from STATION with even ID numbers only. You may print the results in any order but must exclude duplicates from your answer.
Input Format
The STATION table is described as follows:
where LAT_N is the northern latitude and LONG_W is the western longitude.
SELECT DISTINCT CITY FROM STATION WHERE MOD(ID, 2) = 0;
IX. Weather Observation Station 4
Let N be the number of CITY entries in STATION, and let N’ be the number of distinct CITY names in STATION; query the value of N-N’ from STATION. In other words, find the difference between the total number of CITY entries in the table and the number of distinct CITY entries in the table.
Input Format
The STATION table is described as follows:
where LAT_N is the northern latitude and LONG_W is the western longitude.
SELECT COUNT(CITY) — COUNT(DISTINCT CITY) FROM STATION ;
X. Weather Observation Station 5
Query the two cities in STATION with the shortest and longest CITY names, as well as their respective lengths (i.e.: number of characters in the name). If there is more than one smallest or largest city, choose the one that comes first when ordered alphabetically.
Input Format
The STATION table is described as follows:
where LAT_N is the northern latitude and LONG_W is the western longitude.
SELECT * FROM (SELECT DISTINCT city, LENGTH(city) FROM station ORDER BY LENGTH(city) ASC, city ASC) WHERE ROWNUM = 1
UNION
SELECT * FROM (SELECT DISTINCT city, LENGTH(city) FROM station ORDER BY LENGTH(city) DESC, city ASC) WHERE ROWNUM = 1;
XI. Weather Observation Station 6
Query the list of CITY names starting with vowels (i.e., a
, e
, i
, o
, or u
) from STATION. Your result cannot contain duplicates.
#data-analysis #sql #technology #data-science #programming #data analysis
1594369800
SQL stands for Structured Query Language. SQL is a scripting language expected to store, control, and inquiry information put away in social databases. The main manifestation of SQL showed up in 1974, when a gathering in IBM built up the principal model of a social database. The primary business social database was discharged by Relational Software later turning out to be Oracle.
Models for SQL exist. In any case, the SQL that can be utilized on every last one of the major RDBMS today is in various flavors. This is because of two reasons:
1. The SQL order standard is genuinely intricate, and it isn’t handy to actualize the whole standard.
2. Every database seller needs an approach to separate its item from others.
Right now, contrasts are noted where fitting.
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1596441660
When you develop large chunks of T-SQL code with the help of the SQL Server Management Studio tool, it is essential to test the “Live” behavior of your code by making sure that each small piece of code works fine and being able to allocate any error message that may cause a failure within that code.
The easiest way to perform that would be to use the T-SQL debugger feature, which used to be built-in over the SQL Server Management Studio tool. But since the T-SQL debugger feature was removed completely from SQL Server Management Studio 18 and later editions, we need a replacement for that feature. This is because we cannot keep using the old versions of SSMS just to support the T-SQL Debugger feature without “enjoying” the new features and bug fixes that are released in the new SSMS versions.
If you plan to wait for SSMS to bring back the T-SQL Debugger feature, vote in the Put Debugger back into SSMS 18 to ask Microsoft to reintroduce it.
As for me, I searched for an alternative tool for a T-SQL Debugger SSMS built-in feature and found that Devart company rolled out a new T-SQL Debugger feature to version 6.4 of SQL – Complete tool. SQL Complete is an add-in for Visual Studio and SSMS that offers scripts autocompletion capabilities, which help develop and debug your SQL database project.
The SQL Debugger feature of SQL Complete allows you to check the execution of your scripts, procedures, functions, and triggers step by step by adding breakpoints to the lines where you plan to start, suspend, evaluate, step through, and then to continue the execution of your script.
You can download SQL Complete from the dbForge Download page and install it on your machine using a straight-forward installation wizard. The wizard will ask you to specify the installation path for the SQL Complete tool and the versions of SSMS and Visual Studio that you plan to install the SQL Complete on, as an add-in, from the versions that are installed on your machine, as shown below:
Once SQL Complete is fully installed on your machine, the dbForge SQL Complete installation wizard will notify you of whether the installation was completed successfully or the wizard faced any specific issue that you can troubleshoot and fix easily. If there are no issues, the wizard will provide you with an option to open the SSMS tool and start using the SQL Complete tool, as displayed below:
When you open SSMS, you will see a new “Debug” tools menu, under which you can navigate the SQL Debugger feature options. Besides, you will see a list of icons that will be used to control the debug mode of the T-SQL query at the leftmost side of the SSMS tool. If you cannot see the list, you can go to View -> Toolbars -> Debugger to make these icons visible.
During the debugging session, the SQL Debugger icons will be as follows:
The functionality of these icons within the SQL Debugger can be summarized as:
#sql server #sql #sql debugger #sql server #sql server stored procedure #ssms #t-sql queries
1596448980
Let’s say the chief credit and collections officer asks you to list down the names of people, their unpaid balances per month, and the current running balance and wants you to import this data array into Excel. The purpose is to analyze the data and come up with an offer making payments lighter to mitigate the effects of the COVID19 pandemic.
Do you opt to use a query and a nested subquery or a join? What decision will you make?
Before we do a deep dive into syntax, performance impact, and caveats, why not define a subquery first?
In the simplest terms, a subquery is a query within a query. While a query that embodies a subquery is the outer query, we refer to a subquery as the inner query or inner select. And parentheses enclose a subquery similar to the structure below:
SELECT
col1
,col2
,(subquery) as col3
FROM table1
[JOIN table2 ON table1.col1 = table2.col2]
WHERE col1 <operator> (subquery)
We are going to look upon the following points in this post:
As is customary, we provide examples and illustrations to enhance understanding. But bear in mind that the main focus of this post is on subqueries in SQL Server.
Now, let’s get started.
For one thing, subqueries are categorized based on their dependency on the outer query.
Let me describe what a self-contained subquery is.
Self-contained subqueries (or sometimes referred to as non-correlated or simple subqueries) are independent of the tables in the outer query. Let me illustrate this:
-- Get sales orders of customers from Southwest United States
-- (TerritoryID = 4)
USE [AdventureWorks]
GO
SELECT CustomerID, SalesOrderID
FROM Sales.SalesOrderHeader
WHERE CustomerID IN (SELECT [CustomerID]
FROM [AdventureWorks].[Sales].[Customer]
WHERE TerritoryID = 4)
As demonstrated in the above code, the subquery (enclosed in parentheses below) has no references to any column in the outer query. Additionally, you can highlight the subquery in SQL Server Management Studio and execute it without getting any runtime errors.
Which, in turn, leads to easier debugging of self-contained subqueries.
The next thing to consider is correlated subqueries. Compared to its self-contained counterpart, this one has at least one column being referenced from the outer query. To clarify, I will provide an example:
USE [AdventureWorks]
GO
SELECT DISTINCT a.LastName, a.FirstName, b.BusinessEntityID
FROM Person.Person AS p
JOIN HumanResources.Employee AS e ON p.BusinessEntityID = e.BusinessEntityID
WHERE 1262000.00 IN
(SELECT [SalesQuota]
FROM Sales.SalesPersonQuotaHistory spq
WHERE p.BusinessEntityID = spq.BusinessEntityID)
Were you attentive enough to notice the reference to BusinessEntityID from the Person table? Well done!
Once a column from the outer query is referenced in the subquery, it becomes a correlated subquery. One more point to consider: if you highlight a subquery and execute it, an error will occur.
And yes, you are absolutely right: this makes correlated subqueries pretty harder to debug.
To make debugging possible, follow these steps:
Isolating the subquery for debugging will make it look like this:
SELECT [SalesQuota]
FROM Sales.SalesPersonQuotaHistory spq
WHERE spq.BusinessEntityID = <constant value>
Now, let’s dig a little deeper into the output of subqueries.
Well, first, let’s think of what returned values can we expect from SQL subqueries.
In fact, there are 3 possible outcomes:
Let’s start with single-valued output. This type of subquery can appear anywhere in the outer query where an expression is expected, like the WHERE clause.
-- Output a single value which is the maximum or last TransactionID
USE [AdventureWorks]
GO
SELECT TransactionID, ProductID, TransactionDate, Quantity
FROM Production.TransactionHistory
WHERE TransactionID = (SELECT MAX(t.TransactionID)
FROM Production.TransactionHistory t)
When you use a MAX() function, you retrieve a single value. That’s exactly what happened to our subquery above. Using the equal (=) operator tells SQL Server that you expect a single value. Another thing: if the subquery returns multiple values using the equals (=) operator, you get an error, similar to the one below:
Msg 512, Level 16, State 1, Line 20
Subquery returned more than 1 value. This is not permitted when the subquery follows =, !=, <, <= , >, >= or when the subquery is used as an expression.
Next, we examine the multi-valued output. This kind of subquery returns a list of values with a single column. Additionally, operators like IN and NOT IN will expect one or more values.
-- Output multiple values which is a list of customers with lastnames that --- start with 'I'
USE [AdventureWorks]
GO
SELECT [SalesOrderID], [OrderDate], [ShipDate], [CustomerID]
FROM Sales.SalesOrderHeader
WHERE [CustomerID] IN (SELECT c.[CustomerID] FROM Sales.Customer c
INNER JOIN Person.Person p ON c.PersonID = p.BusinessEntityID
WHERE p.lastname LIKE N'I%' AND p.PersonType='SC')
And last but not least, why not delve into whole table outputs.
-- Output a table of values based on sales orders
USE [AdventureWorks]
GO
SELECT [ShipYear],
COUNT(DISTINCT [CustomerID]) AS CustomerCount
FROM (SELECT YEAR([ShipDate]) AS [ShipYear], [CustomerID]
FROM Sales.SalesOrderHeader) AS Shipments
GROUP BY [ShipYear]
ORDER BY [ShipYear]
Have you noticed the FROM clause?
Instead of using a table, it used a subquery. This is called a derived table or a table subquery.
And now, let me present you some ground rules when using this sort of query:
In this case, a derived table has the benefits of a physical table. That’s why in our example, we can use COUNT() in one of the columns of the derived table.
That’s about all regarding subquery outputs. But before we get any further, you may have noticed that the logic behind the example for multiple values and others as well can also be done using a JOIN.
-- Output multiple values which is a list of customers with lastnames that start with 'I'
USE [AdventureWorks]
GO
SELECT o.[SalesOrderID], o.[OrderDate], o.[ShipDate], o.[CustomerID]
FROM Sales.SalesOrderHeader o
INNER JOIN Sales.Customer c on o.CustomerID = c.CustomerID
INNER JOIN Person.Person p ON c.PersonID = p.BusinessEntityID
WHERE p.LastName LIKE N'I%' AND p.PersonType = 'SC'
In fact, the output will be the same. But which one performs better?
Before we get into that, let me tell you that I have dedicated a section to this hot topic. We’ll examine it with complete execution plans and have a look at illustrations.
So, bear with me for a moment. Let’s discuss another way to place your subqueries.
#sql server #sql query #sql server #sql subqueries #t-sql statements #sql
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When working in the SQL Server, we may have to check some other databases other than the current one which we are working. In that scenario we may not be sure that does we have access to those Databases?. In this article we discuss the list of databases that are available for the current logged user in SQL Server
#sql server #available databases for current user #check database has access #list of available database #sql #sql query #sql server database #sql tips #sql tips and tricks #tips
1603760400
This article will introduce the concept of SQL recursive. Recursive CTE is a really cool. We will see that it can often simplify our code, and avoid a cascade of SQL queries!
The recursive queries are used to query hierarchical data. It avoids a cascade of SQL queries, you can only do one query to retrieve the hierarchical data.
First, what is a CTE? A CTE (Common Table Expression) is a temporary named result set that you can reference within a SELECT, INSERT, UPDATE, or DELETE statement. For example, you can use CTE when, in a query, you will use the same subquery more than once.
A recursive CTE is one having a subquery that refers to its own name!
Recursive CTE is defined in the SQL standard.
A recursive CTE has this structure:
In this example, we use hierarchical data. Each row can have zero or one parent. And it parent can also have a parent etc.
Create table test (id integer, parent_id integer);
insert into test (id, parent_id) values (1, null);
insert into test (id, parent_id) values (11, 1);
insert into test (id, parent_id) values (111, 11);
insert into test (id, parent_id) values (112, 11);
insert into test (id, parent_id) values (12, 1);
insert into test (id, parent_id) values (121, 12);
For example, the row with id 111 has as ancestors: 11 and 1.
Before knowing the recursive CTE, I was doing several queries to get all the ancestors of a row.
For example, to retrieve all the ancestors of the row with id 111.
While (has parent)
Select id, parent_id from test where id = X
With recursive CTE, we can retrieve all ancestors of a row with only one SQL query :)
WITH RECURSIVE cte_test AS (
SELECT id, parent_id FROM test WHERE id = 111
UNION
SELECT test.id, test.parent_id FROM test JOIN cte_test ON cte_test.id = test.parent_id
) SELECT * FROM cte_test
Explanations:
It indicates we will make recursive
It is the initial query.
It is the recursive expression! We make a jointure with the current CTE!
Replay this example here
#sql #database #sql-server #sql-injection #writing-sql-queries #sql-beginner-tips #better-sql-querying-tips #sql-top-story