Database Access using SQL
Database Management System Database: a structured, self-describing collection of data. Control access to the database. • authentication • enforce permissions • data integrity • access services Database Manager User Interface & communication protocol SELECT * FROM city WHERE name LIKE Ban% Client
Client - Server Databases  Database Server is a separate process on a host.  Clients can be on any machine.  Many programs may be clients using a standard API. Server mysqld "mysql" utility Java App +JDBC client Excel client Server side Client side server controls access to database
Install Client Software For this lab, you will access MySQL server on the network. All you need is a client application. You don't need to run a MySQL server on your computer. Client Tools mysql-workbench-gpl-5.x.y-win32.msi or use older GUI Tools: mysql-gui-tools-5.1.7-win32.msi From: se.cpe.ku.ac.th/download/mysql
Add MySQL "bin" to your Path This is so you can run the "mysql" command line. On Windows: 1. Right-click My Computer. 2. Choose Properties. 3. Click "Advanced". 4. Click "Environment Variables". 5. Edit PATH variable and add: C:Windowsblah;C:Program FilesMySqlbin
Exercise  Use the "mysql" command  if machine doesn't have "mysql" then use MySQL Query Browser GUI.  What is the client version number?  Use help: how do you connect to a server? dos> mysql --version mysql Ver 14.12 Distrib 5.0.16, for Win32 dos> mysql --help displays a long help message
Exercise  Connect to MySQL server on host "se.cpe.ku.ac.th".  user: student password: student  What MySQL version is the server? dos> mysql -h se.cpe.ku.ac.th -u student -p Enter password: nisit mysql> SELECT version();
Structure of a Database  A database system may contain many databases.  Each database is composed of schema and tables. sql> USE bank; sql> SHOW tables; +----------------+ | Tables_in_bank | +----------------+ | accounts | | clients | +----------------+ sql> SHOW databases; +--------------+ | Database | +--------------+ | mysql | | test | | bank | | world | +--------------+ MySQL only shows databases that a user has permission to access.
A Database Structure Database Schema Table field1: t1 field2: t2 field3: t3 indexes Schema Table field1: t1 field2: t2 field3: t3 indexes Table field1: t1 field2: t2 field3: t3 indexes Table field1: t1 field2: t2 field3: t3 indexes A database contains schema, which describe the organization of the database. A schema can contain: tables - containing data index files - for fast lookup of data stored procedures, constraints, triggers, and more
Contents of a Table  A table contains the actual data in records (rows).  A record is composed of fields (columns).  Each record contains one set of data values. +------+------------+-------+-------------+---------+ | ID | Name | CCode | District | Populatn +------+---------------+------------------+---------+ | 3320 | Bangkok | THA | Bangkok | 6320174 | | 3321 | Nonthaburi | THA | Nonthaburi | 292100 | | 3323 | Chiang Mai | THA | Chiang Mai | 171100 | +------+------------+-------+-------------+---------+ records (rows) fields (columns)
Key field for Identifying Rows  A table contains a primary key that uniquely identifies a row of data.  Each record must have a distinct value of primary key  The primary key is used to relate (join) tables. +------+------------+-------+-------------+---------+ | ID | Name | CCode | District | Populatn +------+---------------+------------------+---------+ | 3320 | Bangkok | THA | Bangkok | 6320174 | | 3321 | Nonthaburi | THA | Nonthaburi | 292100 | | 3323 | Chiang Mai | THA | Chiang Mai | 171100 | +------+------------+-------+-------------+---------+ ID is the primary key in City table.
Structure of a Table Every field has:  a name  a data type and length To view the structure of a table use: DESCRIBE tablename sql> DESCRIBE City; +-------------+-----------+-----+-----+---------+----------------+ | Field | Type | Null| Key | Default | Extra | +-------------+-----------+-----+-----+---------+----------------+ | ID | int(11) | NO | PRI | | auto_increment | | Name | char(35) | NO | | | | | CountryCode | char(3) | NO | | | | | District | char(20) | NO | | | | | Population | int(11) | NO | | 0 | | +-------------+-----------+-----+-----+---------+----------------+
Structure of a Table "SHOW columns FROM tablename" shows the same information. sql> SHOW columns FROM City; +-------------+-----------+-----+-----+---------+----------------+ | Field | Type | Null| Key | Default | Extra | +-------------+-----------+-----+-----+---------+----------------+ | ID | int(11) | NO | PRI | | auto_increment | | Name | char(35) | NO | | | | | CountryCode | char(3) | NO | | | | | District | char(20) | NO | | | | | Population | int(11) | NO | | 0 | | +-------------+-----------+-----+-----+---------+----------------+ Fields may have a default value to use if a value is not assigned explicitly.
Structured Query Language  Structured Query Language (SQL) is the standard language for accessing information a database.  SQL is case-insensitive and free format.  Enter commands interactively or in a script file.  SQL statements can use multiple lines  end each statement with a semi-colon ; sql> USE world; database changed. sql> SHOW tables; sql> SHOW columns FROM city; sql> DECRIBE country; SQL statements end with semi-colon.
Exercise 1. Connect to MySQL server on host "se.cpe.ku.ac.th".  user: student password: nisit 2. What databases are on the server? 3. What tables are in the world database? dos> mysql -h se.cpe.ku.ac.th -u student -p Enter password: nisit mysql> SHOW databases; mysql> USE world; mysql> SHOW tables;
mysql> SHOW tables FROM world ; Exercise No semi-colon.  Omit the semi-colon. What happens?  Enter a command on several lines
DESCRIBE DESCRIBE shows the structure of a table.  same as "SHOW columns FROM tablename". sql> DESCRIBE city; +-------------+-----------+-----+-----+---------+----------------+ | Field | Type | Null| Key | Default | Extra | +-------------+-----------+-----+-----+---------+----------------+ | ID | int(11) | NO | PRI | | auto_increment | | Name | char(35) | NO | | | | | CountryCode | char(3) | NO | | | | | District | char(20) | NO | | | | | Population | int(11) | NO | | 0 | | +-------------+-----------+-----+-----+---------+----------------+
Exercise For the world database:  what fields does the Country table have?  what information is in the fields?  which fields contain strings? (char or varchar)  which fields contain floating point values?  what is the primary key of the Country table?
Exercise: Case Sensitivity  Is SQL case sensitive?  Are names of databases and tables case sensitive? mysql> DESCRIBE city; mysql> describe city; mysql> use world; mysql> use WORLD; mysql> describe city; mysql> describe City;
Exercise: O-O Analogy of a Table? Database Object Oriented table __________________ record (row) __________________ fields (columns) __________________ +------+------------+--------------+---------+ | ID | Name | District | Popula..} +------+------------+--------------+---------+ | 3320 | Bangkok | Bangkok | 6320174 | | 3321 | Nonthaburi | Nonthaburi | 292100 | | 3323 | Chiang Mai | Chiang Mai | 171100 | +------+------------+--------------+---------+ fields (columns) records (rows)
Qualifying Names  SQL uses "." to qualify elements of a hierarchy  just like most O-O languages World.city "city" table in World db city.name name field in city table World.city.name fully qualified name sql> DESCRIBE World.country; ... sql> SELECT country.name from country;
4 Basic Database Operations The 4 most common operations: SELECT query (search) the data INSERT add new records to a table(s) UPDATE modify existing record(s) DELETE delete record(s) from a table What is CRUD? Programmers call these operations "CRUD". What does CRUD stand for?
Querying Data in a Table SELECT displays field values from a table: SELECT field1, field2, field3 FROM table ;  displays ALL rows from the table.  use LIMIT number to limit how many results. sql> SELECT accountNumber, balance FROM accounts; +---------------+---------------+----------+---------+ | accountNumber | accountName | clientID | balance | +---------------+---------------+----------+---------+ | 11111113 | P.Watanapong | 00001001 | 300000 | | 11111114 | CPE Fund | 00001002 | 1840000 | +---------------+---------------+----------+---------+
SELECT statement with *  Display values for all fields in table: SELECT * FROM tablename ; sql> SELECT * from accounts; +---------------+---------------+----------+---------+ | accountNumber | accountName | clientID | balance | +---------------+---------------+----------+---------+ | 11111113 | P.Watanapong | 00001001 | 300000 | | 11111114 | CPE Fund | 00001002 | 1840000 | +---------------+---------------+----------+---------+
Qualifying SELECT  Select columns from a table that match some criteria: SELECT field1, field2, field3 FROM table WHERE condition ORDER BY field1,... [ASC|DESC]; Example: cities with population > 5 M sql> SELECT * FROM City WHERE population > 5000000 ORDER BY population DESC;
Strings in SQL  Use single quote mark around String constants. SELECT * FROM Country WHERE name = 'Thailand'; SELECT * FROM City WHERE Name = 'Los Angeles';
Exercises 1. What are the first 3 cities in the database? 2. What are the 3 most populous countries in the world? 3. What is the smallest country in the world? How big?
Exercises for Thailand 1. What is the country code for Thailand? SELECT * from ... WHERE name = 'Thailand' 2. List the cities in Thailand, sorted by largest population to smallest. Use "ORDER BY ..." 3. What languages are spoken in Thailand? 4. What countries speak Thai?
WHERE conditions name = 'Bangkok' equality test name LIKE 'Bang%' pattern match population >= 100000 population < 500000 gnp <> 0 relations <> is not equals grade IN ('A','B','C','D','F') contained in set
Exercise with WHERE & ORDER 1. What is the most populous country in Europe?  use WHERE continent = ... 2. What countries have name beginning with 'Z'? 3. In Thailand what cities have names like Ban______
Count Function Select can be used with functions, such as COUNT: SELECT COUNT(*) FROM accounts WHERE balance=0; sql> SELECT COUNT(*) from accounts; +----------+ | count(*) | +----------+ | 4 | +----------+ sql> SELECT COUNT(*) from accounts WHERE balance > 1000000;
Exercise 1. How many countries are in the database? 2. How many cities are in China? 3. How many countries are in Europe?
Other Functions in SQL Functions can have arguments, just like C, Java, etc. SUM( expression ) MAX( expression ) MIN( expression ) COUNT( expression ) sql> SELECT MAX(SurfaceArea) FROM country; 1075400.00 (sq.km.) WRONG: This will NOT find the largest country! sql> SELECT MAX(SurfaceArea), Name FROM country; 1075400.00 Afghanistan
SELECT functions  How many people are in the world? SELECT SUM(Population) FROM Country;  How big is the largest country in Asia? SELECT MAX(SurfaceArea) FROM Country WHERE continent='Asia';  What is the version of MySQL? SELECT version();
Exercise 1. What is the total GNP of the entire world? sql> SELECT sum(GNP) FROM country 1. What are the richest countries (GNP per person) in the world? sql> SELECT name, GNP/population FROM country ORDER BY GNP/population DESC LIMIT 20;  What are the most crowded countries (people per surface area) in Asia?
Exercise for Functions Harder:  What are total population and total GNP of each continent?  Hint: use GROUP BY continent
Expressions and Arithmetic  You can use expressions in SQL. Arithmetic: + - * / % sqrt() Grouping: ( ) String ops: substring( ), upper(), length( ) Example: display GNP per person for each country sql> SELECT name, gnp/population AS capita_gnp FROM country ORDER BY capita_gnp DESC; Value of GNP is in millions of US Dollars. How can you show per capita GNP in dollars??? alias
Exercise 1. What countries are the richest? Poorest?  Show the GNP per capita (in US dollars).  Order the results by GNP per capita. 2. What countries are the most crowded?  Crowding refers to population per surface area.
Wildcards to match patterns  Pattern matches: field LIKE 'pattern' SELECT * FROM city WHERE name LIKE 'Ban%'; % means "match anything"
Adding New Records  INSERT adds a new record to a table INSERT INTO table VALUES ( data1, data2, ...); sql> INSERT INTO Accounts VALUES ('22222222', 'Ample Rich', '00000001' 10000000); Query OK, 1 row affected. +---------------+---------------+----------+---------+ | accountNumber | accountName | clientID | balance | +---------------+---------------+----------+---------+ | 22222222 | Ample Rich | 00000001 |10000000 | +---------------+---------------+----------+---------+
INSERT into columns by name INSERT INTO table (field1, field2, ...) VALUES ( data1, data2, ...); sql> INSERT INTO Accounts (accountNumber, balance, accountName) VALUES ('22222222', 10000000, 'Ample Rich'); Query OK, 1 row affected. +---------------+---------------+----------+---------+ | accountNumber | accountName | clientID | balance | +---------------+---------------+----------+---------+ | 20000000 | Ample Rich | |10000000 | +---------------+---------------+----------+---------+
Exercise  Add your home town to the City table or, add another city to the City table. sql> INSERT INTO city (name, countryCode, district, population) VALUES ('Bangsaen', 'THA', 'Chonburi', 30000); Query OK, 1 row affected. The ID field has a qualifier "AUTO_INCREMENT". (see: "DESCRIBE City") This means MySQL will assign the ID value itself.
Exercise  View the City data that you just added!  Correct any errors using UPDATE sql> SELECT * FROM City WHERE City.name = 'Bangsaen'; sql> UPDATE City SET population = 33000 WHERE City.name = 'Bangsaen'; Query OK, 1 row affected.
Warning: INSERT is immediate  Change occurs immediately.  unless you are using transactions  Duplicate data is possible.
3 ways to add data to a table 1. INSERT command (boring). 2. Write INSERT commands in a text file and "source" the file (better). sql> SOURCE mydata.sql 3. IMPORT command (syntax depends on DBMS): sql> LOAD DATA INFILE 'filename' INTO table ...
Copying Data Between Tables  Suppose we have another table named NewAccts  NewAccts has accountNumber, accountName, ... INSERT INTO table (field1, field2, ...) SELECT field1, field2, field3 FROM other_table WHERE condition; sql> INSERT INTO Accounts SELECT * FROM NewAccounts WHERE accountNumber NOT NULL;
UPDATE statement Change values in one or more records: UPDATE table SET field1=value1, field2=value2 WHERE condition; sql> UPDATE city SET population=40000 WHERE name='Bangsaen' AND countrycode='THA'; Query OK, 1 row affected (0.09 sec) | name | countrycode | district | population | +----------+-------------+----------+------------------+ | 11111111 | THA | Chonburi | 40000 |
UPDATE multiple columns You can change multiple columns: UPDATE table SET field1=value1, field2=value2 WHERE condition; sql> UPDATE country SET population=68100000, gnp=345600 WHERE code='THA'; Query OK, 1 row affected (0.09 sec) Example: Update population and GNP of Thailand Source: CIA World Factbook (on the web)
Warning: don't forget WHERE  UPDATE can change every row in a database  Make sure that your WHERE clause selects only records you want to change! sql> UPDATE country SET population=68100000, gnp=345600 ; Query OK, 240 rows affected (0.14 sec) Changed every country in the database!! Oops! I forgot "WHERE ..."
Warning: UPDATE is immediate!  Changes occur immediately. (Can't undo w/o trans.) Be Careful! If you forget the WHERE clause it will change all the rows in the table! sql> UPDATE country SET HeadOfState='Obama'; /* Oops! I forgot "WHERE ..." */ +------+----------------+-------------+--------------+ | Code | Name | Continent | HeadOfState | +------+----------------+-------------+--------------+ | AFG | Afghanistan | Asia | Obama | | NLD | Netherlands | Europe | Obama | | ALB | Albania | Europe | Obama | | DZA | Algeria | Africa | Obama | | ASM | American Samoa | Oceania | Obama | | AND | Andorra | Europe | Obama | | AGO | Angola | Africa | Obama | Obama rules!
Exercise  Update the City you added to the database.  Change its population.
Deleting Records  DELETE one or more records DELETE FROM tablename WHERE condition; Example: Delete all cities with zero population sql> DELETE FROM City WHERE population <= 0; Query OK, 5 rows deleted.
Warning: DELETE can delete all  DELETE affects all rows that match. DELETE FROM tablename WHERE condition; Example: Delete all cities with zero population sql> DELETE FROM City WHERE population <= 0; Query OK, 5 rows deleted.
Safer Delete  First SELECT the key of the row you want sql> SELECT id FROM City WHERE name='Bangsaen'; 6402  If only one match, then delete using primary key sql> DELETE FROM City WHERE id=6402;
Relating Tables The power of a relational database is the ability to selectively combine data from many tables.  select data from multiple tables by matching values  Relationship can be: 1-to-1 student -> photograph 1-to-many country -> city many-to-1 city -> country many-to-many language -> country
Keys Every table should have a primary key that uniquely identifies each row. City ID (PK) Name CountryCode (FK) Population District Country Code (PK) Name Continent Capital ... CountryCode sql> DESCRIBE Country; +-------------+-----------+-----+-----+---------+----------------+ | Field | Type | Null| Key | Default | Extra | +-------------+-----------+-----+-----+---------+----------------+ | Code | char(3) | NO | PRI | | | | Name | char(52) | NO | | | | | ... | | | | | |
Joining Tables  Relate or "join" tables using a condition.  Use "table.field" to qualify a field name: Country.code Country.name City.countrycode = Country.code 1 * City ID (PK) Name CountryCode (FK) Population District Country Code (PK) Name Continent Capital ...
Example: Join Country and City SELECT Country.Name, City.Name FROM Country, City WHERE Country.Code = City.CountryCode AND Continent = 'South America'; Country Code Name Continent Region SurfaceArea Population GNP LocalName Capital City ID Name CountryCode District Population Country.Code = City.CountryCode
Use Aliases to Reduce Typing c is alias for City co is alias for Country SELECT co.Name, c.Name FROM Country co, City c WHERE co.Code = c.CountryCode AND co.Continent = 'South America';
Exercise: Cities in Laos SELECT co.Name, c.Name, c.Population FROM Country co, City c WHERE ... AND ...; List the city names and city populations in Laos.
Exercise 1. How can we find the name of the capital city for each country? Country Code (PK) Name Continent Region SurfaceArea Population GNP LocalName Capital City ID (PK) Name CountryCode District Population
Exercise Solution List the country name and capital city name, for all countries in Asia. SELECT co.name, c.name AS CapitalCity FROM Country co, City c WHERE ... AND ... ;
Exercise 1. How can we join the CountryLanguage table with the County table? Country Code (PK) Name Continent Region SurfaceArea Population GNP LocalName Capital CountryLanguage CountryCode Language isOfficial Percentage FROM Country CO, CountryLanguage L WHERE ...
Exercise 1. In what countries is the Thai language spoken? 2. By what percentage of the people? Example: SELECT CO.name, L.language, L.percentage FROM Country CO, CountryLanguage L WHERE ... AND ... ;
Answer using Aliases  In what countries is Chinese the official language? SELECT C.name, L.language, L.percentage FROM Country C, CountryLanguage L WHERE C.code = L.countrycode AND L.language LIKE '%Chinese' AND isOfficial = 'T'; alias for CountryLanguage you can omit table name when there is no ambiguity
Exercise 1. What countries use English?  ORDER the results by percentage spoken, from largest to smallest %. 2. In how many countries is English the official language? Harder 3. In the world, approximately how many people speak English?  sum( C.population * L.percentage / 100 )
JOIN  Joins tables  Many forms:  INNER JOIN (include only matching columns)  OUTER JOIN (include all columns)  LEFT OUTER JOIN  NATURAL JOIN  CONDITION JOIN  "JOIN" means "INNER JOIN" in MySql.
Example of a Condition Join  JOIN the CountryLanguage and Language tables using the country code: SELECT CO.Name, L.language, L.percentage FROM Country CO JOIN CountryLanguage L ON CO.code = L.countrycode WHERE ...;
Exercise  JOIN the Country and Language tables.  View Country name and language with "SELECT ..."  How many times is Thailand listed in the results? How can you order the results by language ?
Multiple Table Join  You can join many tables at one time: SELECT CO.name, C.*, L.language FROM Country CO JOIN CountryLanguage L ON CO.code = L.countrycode JOIN City C ON CO.code = C.countrycode WHERE ...; /* more conditions */
More SELECT Syntax
GROUP BY ... GROUP BY ... is used when you want to apply a function (count, sum, avg) to a group of rows having a common characteristic. Example: How many countries are in each continent? SELECT continent, count(*) FROM country GROUP BY continent
GROUP BY Exercise What is the total population of each continent?  use sum(population) and GROUP BY SELECT continent, SUM(population) FROM ... GROUP BY ...
Logical operations  OR SELECT * FROM City WHERE District='Songkhla' OR District='Bangkok';  AND SELECT Name, SurfaceArea FROM Country WHERE Continent = 'Africa' AND SurfaceArea > 1000000;  NOT SELECT * FROM Accounts WHERE NOT AvailableBalance = 0;
Set operations  IN SELECT * FROM City WHERE District IN ('Songkhla', 'Bangkok');
Exercise for matching 1. How many countries have a government that is any form of monarchy?  match any government containing 'Monarchy'  How many are some form of monarchy, but not a Constitutional Monarchy (like Thailand)?
GROUP BY ... HAVING ... GROUP BY ... used to apply a function to a group of rows having a characteristic. HAVING ... is used to put a condition on the groups. Example: What countries have more than one official lanaguage??? SELECT countrycode, count(language) FROM countrylanguage ???
GROUP BY ... HAVING ... (1) First, how to count official languages in each country? SELECT countrycode, count(language) FROM countrylanguage WHERE isOfficial='T' GROUP BY countrycode
GROUP BY ... HAVING ... (2) add HAVING to restrict results to count( ) > 1 SELECT countrycode, count(language) FROM countrylanguage WHERE isOfficial='T' GROUP BY countrycode HAVING count(language) > 1
Getting Help Online help for  HELP for the mysql command  HELP for SQL statements mysql> HELP mysql> HELP SELECT If MySql doesn't have help on SQL commands, then load the "help tables" data onto your server. Download help table data from: http://dev.mysql.com/downloads in the "Documentation" section.
Subqueries  Use the result of one query as part of another query. Example: Which country has the largest population? SELECT Name, Population FROM country WHERE Population = ( SELECT max(population) FROM country); To use subqueries in MySQL you need version 4.1 or newer. Subquery
Exercise  In which country do people live the longest?  How long to they live? SELECT Name, LifeExpectancy FROM country WHERE LifeExpectancy = ( insert subquery here ) ;
LIMIT instead of subquery Another way to get a "most" or "least" result:  ORDER results by what you want. Use ASC or DESC  use LIMIT 1 to limit number of results. SELECT Name, Population FROM country ORDER BY Population DESC LIMIT 1;
Exercise  Which nation is the most crowded?  Find the country with maximum population density (population per sq. km.)  Show the name and the population density Hint: create an alias for a computed field: sql> SELECT name, population/surfaceArea AS density WHERE ... Alias: density := population/surfaceArea
Exercise Is Thailand richer than other countries in Southest Asia?  List the name and GNP/population (=wealth) of countries in the same region as Thailand.  use a subquery for "the region of Thailand": SELECT ... FROM Country WHERE region = (SELECT region WHERE ...) ORDER BY ...; order the results by wealth
Exercise: increasing wealth Thailand has decided to annex (invade) either Cambodia, Laus, Vietnam, or Malaysia. The invaded country will become part of the new Thailand. The government wants the combined country to be wealthier than Thailand is now. "wealth" means GNP/population. What country should Thailand invade?
Data Definition Commands These commands alter the structure of a database CREATE create a Table, Index, or Database ALTER modify structure of a Database or Table DROP delete an entire Table, Index, or Database RENAME rename a Table
Creating a Table To add a new table to a database: CREATE TABLE tablename (field1, field2, ... ) options ; sql> CREATE TABLE CUSTOMER ( accountNumber VARCHAR(8) NOT NULL, clientID VARCHAR(40) NOT NULL, balance DOUBLE DEFAULT '0', availableBalance DOUBLE DEFAULT '0' ) ; Query OK, 0 rows affected.
Productivity Hint  Type the "CREATE TABLE" statement into a file.  "source" the file in mysql: source filename; CREATE TABLE CUSTOMER ( accountNumber CHAR(10) NOT NULL, clientID VARCHAR(40) NOT NULL, balance DOUBLE DEFAULT '0', availableBalance DOUBLE DEFAULT '0', PRIMARY KEY( clientID ) ) ; File: /temp/create-table.sql sql> SOURCE /temp/create-table.sql; Query OK, 0 rows affected.
Deleting Records a Table You must specify a "WHERE" clause for rows to delete. If there is no "WHERE", it deletes all rows !! DELETE FROM tablename WHERE condition ; -- first use SELECT to verify condition sql> SELECT * FROM city WHERE name="Bangsaen"; sql> DELETE FROM city WHERE name="Bangsaen"; Query OK, 1 row affected.
Exercise  Delete the city you added to the City table.  On a friend's machine, is it deleted immediately?
Deleting a Table Remove a table from the database DROP TABLE tablename ; sql> DROP TABLE CUSTOMER ;
Views  A View is like a "virtual table" containing selected data from one or more real tables. Country Name Continent Code ... CountryLan guage Language Percentage isOfficial ... MyView Name Language Percentage CREATE VIEW MyView AS ...
View Example Create a view for country name, languages, and percentage. sql> CREATE VIEW lang AS SELECT name, language, percentage FROM Country C, CountryLanguage L WHERE C.code = L.countrycode ORDER BY language ASC; Query OK, 0 rows affected. sql> SELECT * FROM lang WHERE language='Thai'; Use the view to browse data:
Productivity Hint  Type the "CREATE VIEW" statement into a file.  Read the file into mysql: source filename; CREATE VIEW lang AS SELECT name, language, percentage FROM Country C, CountryLanguage L WHERE C.code = L.countrycode; File: langview.sql sql> SOURCE langview.sql; Query OK, 0 rows affected.
Exercise  Create a view that shows these fields: City.name as name Country.name as country Region Population of the city Official language id of the city  Each person should use a different name for his view, to avoid interfering with each other.  List the tables in world ( show tables ).
Exercise  List the cities in Southest Asia where English is the official language and population is over 100,000.
Exercise  Ask MySQL to "describe" your view.  Delete your view: DROP VIEW viewname ;
Review What is the command to ... 1. list all the databases that you have access to? 2. use the Bank database? 3. view a list of tables in Bank? 4. view the structure of the Accounts table?
SQL Quiz Database Game
Vocabulary  "largest" and "smallest" refer to size (surfaceArea).  "most populous", "least populous" refer to population and population > 0. (exclude unpopulated nations)  "richest", "poorest" means GNP per capita not total GNP, and GNP > 0 (GNP = 0 means no data).  "most crowded" refers to population/surfaceArea
Language Hints  "Fortran is an official language" means its an official language of the country  "Pascal is spoken unofficially" means it is spoken, but not an official language  "COBOL is spoken" means COBOL is a language and percentage > 0
What is the World's Smallest Nation? How big is it?
What is the Largest Country in Africa?  Show the SQL  How big is it?
What are the Poorest Countries in Asia?  must have GNP data (GNP > 0)  List 3 poorest nations.  What is the GNP per person? NOTE: GNP is measured in $1,000,000. Multiply your answer by 1,000,000 to get US$.
What is the Richest Country in the Middle East (region)?  What is the GNP per person?  Show result is US$ (not million).  Round the income to nearest dollar!  WRONG: 12345.6789 NOTE: GNP is database is measured in $1,000,000. Multiply your answer by 1,000,000 to get US$.
In what countries is Thai spoken? SELECT ... FROM Country C JOIN CountryLanguage L ON C.code = L.countrycode WHERE ...
How many people speak English? 2 queries:  how many in each country  total for world SELECT ... FROM Country C JOIN CountryLanguage L ON C.code = L.countrycode WHERE ...
History of Empires through Language Empires are cultures that spread over many countries. We can detect past Empires by the spread of language.  What languages are spoken in greatest number of countries?  Can you name the Empire?
History of Empires through Language We can detect past Empires by the spread of language.  What languages are spoken in greatest number of countries? SELECT L.language, sum(L.percentage*C.population) AS sum FROM Country C JOIN CountryLanguage L ON C.code = L.countrycode GROUP BY L.language ORDER BY sum DESC
What cities have a population > 6M ?  Print city name, population, and country name  Sort by population -- largest first +-----------------+------------+-------------------------+ | name | population | country_name | +-----------------+------------+-------------------------+ ... | Bangkok | 6320174 | Thailand | ...
Where is Dari the Official Language? In what country is Dari the official language?
4 official languages? What country in Europe has 4 official languages? SELECT ... FROM Country C JOIN CountryLanguage L ON C.code = L.countrycode WHERE ... GROUP BY C.code -- group by country HAVING ...
Resources MySQL  http://dev.mysql.com/tech-resources/articles/ Learning SQL  http://www.w3schools.com/sql/ nice tutorial and command reference

MYSQL database presentation slides with examples

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    Database Management System Database:a structured, self-describing collection of data. Control access to the database. • authentication • enforce permissions • data integrity • access services Database Manager User Interface & communication protocol SELECT * FROM city WHERE name LIKE Ban% Client
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    Client - ServerDatabases  Database Server is a separate process on a host.  Clients can be on any machine.  Many programs may be clients using a standard API. Server mysqld "mysql" utility Java App +JDBC client Excel client Server side Client side server controls access to database
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    Install Client Software Forthis lab, you will access MySQL server on the network. All you need is a client application. You don't need to run a MySQL server on your computer. Client Tools mysql-workbench-gpl-5.x.y-win32.msi or use older GUI Tools: mysql-gui-tools-5.1.7-win32.msi From: se.cpe.ku.ac.th/download/mysql
  • 5.
    Add MySQL "bin"to your Path This is so you can run the "mysql" command line. On Windows: 1. Right-click My Computer. 2. Choose Properties. 3. Click "Advanced". 4. Click "Environment Variables". 5. Edit PATH variable and add: C:Windowsblah;C:Program FilesMySqlbin
  • 6.
    Exercise  Use the"mysql" command  if machine doesn't have "mysql" then use MySQL Query Browser GUI.  What is the client version number?  Use help: how do you connect to a server? dos> mysql --version mysql Ver 14.12 Distrib 5.0.16, for Win32 dos> mysql --help displays a long help message
  • 7.
    Exercise  Connect toMySQL server on host "se.cpe.ku.ac.th".  user: student password: student  What MySQL version is the server? dos> mysql -h se.cpe.ku.ac.th -u student -p Enter password: nisit mysql> SELECT version();
  • 8.
    Structure of aDatabase  A database system may contain many databases.  Each database is composed of schema and tables. sql> USE bank; sql> SHOW tables; +----------------+ | Tables_in_bank | +----------------+ | accounts | | clients | +----------------+ sql> SHOW databases; +--------------+ | Database | +--------------+ | mysql | | test | | bank | | world | +--------------+ MySQL only shows databases that a user has permission to access.
  • 9.
    A Database Structure Database Schema Table field1:t1 field2: t2 field3: t3 indexes Schema Table field1: t1 field2: t2 field3: t3 indexes Table field1: t1 field2: t2 field3: t3 indexes Table field1: t1 field2: t2 field3: t3 indexes A database contains schema, which describe the organization of the database. A schema can contain: tables - containing data index files - for fast lookup of data stored procedures, constraints, triggers, and more
  • 10.
    Contents of aTable  A table contains the actual data in records (rows).  A record is composed of fields (columns).  Each record contains one set of data values. +------+------------+-------+-------------+---------+ | ID | Name | CCode | District | Populatn +------+---------------+------------------+---------+ | 3320 | Bangkok | THA | Bangkok | 6320174 | | 3321 | Nonthaburi | THA | Nonthaburi | 292100 | | 3323 | Chiang Mai | THA | Chiang Mai | 171100 | +------+------------+-------+-------------+---------+ records (rows) fields (columns)
  • 11.
    Key field forIdentifying Rows  A table contains a primary key that uniquely identifies a row of data.  Each record must have a distinct value of primary key  The primary key is used to relate (join) tables. +------+------------+-------+-------------+---------+ | ID | Name | CCode | District | Populatn +------+---------------+------------------+---------+ | 3320 | Bangkok | THA | Bangkok | 6320174 | | 3321 | Nonthaburi | THA | Nonthaburi | 292100 | | 3323 | Chiang Mai | THA | Chiang Mai | 171100 | +------+------------+-------+-------------+---------+ ID is the primary key in City table.
  • 12.
    Structure of aTable Every field has:  a name  a data type and length To view the structure of a table use: DESCRIBE tablename sql> DESCRIBE City; +-------------+-----------+-----+-----+---------+----------------+ | Field | Type | Null| Key | Default | Extra | +-------------+-----------+-----+-----+---------+----------------+ | ID | int(11) | NO | PRI | | auto_increment | | Name | char(35) | NO | | | | | CountryCode | char(3) | NO | | | | | District | char(20) | NO | | | | | Population | int(11) | NO | | 0 | | +-------------+-----------+-----+-----+---------+----------------+
  • 13.
    Structure of aTable "SHOW columns FROM tablename" shows the same information. sql> SHOW columns FROM City; +-------------+-----------+-----+-----+---------+----------------+ | Field | Type | Null| Key | Default | Extra | +-------------+-----------+-----+-----+---------+----------------+ | ID | int(11) | NO | PRI | | auto_increment | | Name | char(35) | NO | | | | | CountryCode | char(3) | NO | | | | | District | char(20) | NO | | | | | Population | int(11) | NO | | 0 | | +-------------+-----------+-----+-----+---------+----------------+ Fields may have a default value to use if a value is not assigned explicitly.
  • 14.
    Structured Query Language Structured Query Language (SQL) is the standard language for accessing information a database.  SQL is case-insensitive and free format.  Enter commands interactively or in a script file.  SQL statements can use multiple lines  end each statement with a semi-colon ; sql> USE world; database changed. sql> SHOW tables; sql> SHOW columns FROM city; sql> DECRIBE country; SQL statements end with semi-colon.
  • 15.
    Exercise 1. Connect toMySQL server on host "se.cpe.ku.ac.th".  user: student password: nisit 2. What databases are on the server? 3. What tables are in the world database? dos> mysql -h se.cpe.ku.ac.th -u student -p Enter password: nisit mysql> SHOW databases; mysql> USE world; mysql> SHOW tables;
  • 16.
    mysql> SHOW tables FROM world ; Exercise Nosemi-colon.  Omit the semi-colon. What happens?  Enter a command on several lines
  • 17.
    DESCRIBE DESCRIBE shows thestructure of a table.  same as "SHOW columns FROM tablename". sql> DESCRIBE city; +-------------+-----------+-----+-----+---------+----------------+ | Field | Type | Null| Key | Default | Extra | +-------------+-----------+-----+-----+---------+----------------+ | ID | int(11) | NO | PRI | | auto_increment | | Name | char(35) | NO | | | | | CountryCode | char(3) | NO | | | | | District | char(20) | NO | | | | | Population | int(11) | NO | | 0 | | +-------------+-----------+-----+-----+---------+----------------+
  • 18.
    Exercise For the worlddatabase:  what fields does the Country table have?  what information is in the fields?  which fields contain strings? (char or varchar)  which fields contain floating point values?  what is the primary key of the Country table?
  • 19.
    Exercise: Case Sensitivity Is SQL case sensitive?  Are names of databases and tables case sensitive? mysql> DESCRIBE city; mysql> describe city; mysql> use world; mysql> use WORLD; mysql> describe city; mysql> describe City;
  • 20.
    Exercise: O-O Analogyof a Table? Database Object Oriented table __________________ record (row) __________________ fields (columns) __________________ +------+------------+--------------+---------+ | ID | Name | District | Popula..} +------+------------+--------------+---------+ | 3320 | Bangkok | Bangkok | 6320174 | | 3321 | Nonthaburi | Nonthaburi | 292100 | | 3323 | Chiang Mai | Chiang Mai | 171100 | +------+------------+--------------+---------+ fields (columns) records (rows)
  • 21.
    Qualifying Names  SQLuses "." to qualify elements of a hierarchy  just like most O-O languages World.city "city" table in World db city.name name field in city table World.city.name fully qualified name sql> DESCRIBE World.country; ... sql> SELECT country.name from country;
  • 22.
    4 Basic DatabaseOperations The 4 most common operations: SELECT query (search) the data INSERT add new records to a table(s) UPDATE modify existing record(s) DELETE delete record(s) from a table What is CRUD? Programmers call these operations "CRUD". What does CRUD stand for?
  • 23.
    Querying Data ina Table SELECT displays field values from a table: SELECT field1, field2, field3 FROM table ;  displays ALL rows from the table.  use LIMIT number to limit how many results. sql> SELECT accountNumber, balance FROM accounts; +---------------+---------------+----------+---------+ | accountNumber | accountName | clientID | balance | +---------------+---------------+----------+---------+ | 11111113 | P.Watanapong | 00001001 | 300000 | | 11111114 | CPE Fund | 00001002 | 1840000 | +---------------+---------------+----------+---------+
  • 24.
    SELECT statement with*  Display values for all fields in table: SELECT * FROM tablename ; sql> SELECT * from accounts; +---------------+---------------+----------+---------+ | accountNumber | accountName | clientID | balance | +---------------+---------------+----------+---------+ | 11111113 | P.Watanapong | 00001001 | 300000 | | 11111114 | CPE Fund | 00001002 | 1840000 | +---------------+---------------+----------+---------+
  • 25.
    Qualifying SELECT  Selectcolumns from a table that match some criteria: SELECT field1, field2, field3 FROM table WHERE condition ORDER BY field1,... [ASC|DESC]; Example: cities with population > 5 M sql> SELECT * FROM City WHERE population > 5000000 ORDER BY population DESC;
  • 26.
    Strings in SQL Use single quote mark around String constants. SELECT * FROM Country WHERE name = 'Thailand'; SELECT * FROM City WHERE Name = 'Los Angeles';
  • 27.
    Exercises 1. What arethe first 3 cities in the database? 2. What are the 3 most populous countries in the world? 3. What is the smallest country in the world? How big?
  • 28.
    Exercises for Thailand 1.What is the country code for Thailand? SELECT * from ... WHERE name = 'Thailand' 2. List the cities in Thailand, sorted by largest population to smallest. Use "ORDER BY ..." 3. What languages are spoken in Thailand? 4. What countries speak Thai?
  • 29.
    WHERE conditions name ='Bangkok' equality test name LIKE 'Bang%' pattern match population >= 100000 population < 500000 gnp <> 0 relations <> is not equals grade IN ('A','B','C','D','F') contained in set
  • 30.
    Exercise with WHERE& ORDER 1. What is the most populous country in Europe?  use WHERE continent = ... 2. What countries have name beginning with 'Z'? 3. In Thailand what cities have names like Ban______
  • 31.
    Count Function Select canbe used with functions, such as COUNT: SELECT COUNT(*) FROM accounts WHERE balance=0; sql> SELECT COUNT(*) from accounts; +----------+ | count(*) | +----------+ | 4 | +----------+ sql> SELECT COUNT(*) from accounts WHERE balance > 1000000;
  • 32.
    Exercise 1. How manycountries are in the database? 2. How many cities are in China? 3. How many countries are in Europe?
  • 33.
    Other Functions inSQL Functions can have arguments, just like C, Java, etc. SUM( expression ) MAX( expression ) MIN( expression ) COUNT( expression ) sql> SELECT MAX(SurfaceArea) FROM country; 1075400.00 (sq.km.) WRONG: This will NOT find the largest country! sql> SELECT MAX(SurfaceArea), Name FROM country; 1075400.00 Afghanistan
  • 34.
    SELECT functions  Howmany people are in the world? SELECT SUM(Population) FROM Country;  How big is the largest country in Asia? SELECT MAX(SurfaceArea) FROM Country WHERE continent='Asia';  What is the version of MySQL? SELECT version();
  • 35.
    Exercise 1. What isthe total GNP of the entire world? sql> SELECT sum(GNP) FROM country 1. What are the richest countries (GNP per person) in the world? sql> SELECT name, GNP/population FROM country ORDER BY GNP/population DESC LIMIT 20;  What are the most crowded countries (people per surface area) in Asia?
  • 36.
    Exercise for Functions Harder: What are total population and total GNP of each continent?  Hint: use GROUP BY continent
  • 37.
    Expressions and Arithmetic You can use expressions in SQL. Arithmetic: + - * / % sqrt() Grouping: ( ) String ops: substring( ), upper(), length( ) Example: display GNP per person for each country sql> SELECT name, gnp/population AS capita_gnp FROM country ORDER BY capita_gnp DESC; Value of GNP is in millions of US Dollars. How can you show per capita GNP in dollars??? alias
  • 38.
    Exercise 1. What countriesare the richest? Poorest?  Show the GNP per capita (in US dollars).  Order the results by GNP per capita. 2. What countries are the most crowded?  Crowding refers to population per surface area.
  • 39.
    Wildcards to matchpatterns  Pattern matches: field LIKE 'pattern' SELECT * FROM city WHERE name LIKE 'Ban%'; % means "match anything"
  • 40.
    Adding New Records INSERT adds a new record to a table INSERT INTO table VALUES ( data1, data2, ...); sql> INSERT INTO Accounts VALUES ('22222222', 'Ample Rich', '00000001' 10000000); Query OK, 1 row affected. +---------------+---------------+----------+---------+ | accountNumber | accountName | clientID | balance | +---------------+---------------+----------+---------+ | 22222222 | Ample Rich | 00000001 |10000000 | +---------------+---------------+----------+---------+
  • 41.
    INSERT into columnsby name INSERT INTO table (field1, field2, ...) VALUES ( data1, data2, ...); sql> INSERT INTO Accounts (accountNumber, balance, accountName) VALUES ('22222222', 10000000, 'Ample Rich'); Query OK, 1 row affected. +---------------+---------------+----------+---------+ | accountNumber | accountName | clientID | balance | +---------------+---------------+----------+---------+ | 20000000 | Ample Rich | |10000000 | +---------------+---------------+----------+---------+
  • 42.
    Exercise  Add yourhome town to the City table or, add another city to the City table. sql> INSERT INTO city (name, countryCode, district, population) VALUES ('Bangsaen', 'THA', 'Chonburi', 30000); Query OK, 1 row affected. The ID field has a qualifier "AUTO_INCREMENT". (see: "DESCRIBE City") This means MySQL will assign the ID value itself.
  • 43.
    Exercise  View theCity data that you just added!  Correct any errors using UPDATE sql> SELECT * FROM City WHERE City.name = 'Bangsaen'; sql> UPDATE City SET population = 33000 WHERE City.name = 'Bangsaen'; Query OK, 1 row affected.
  • 44.
    Warning: INSERT isimmediate  Change occurs immediately.  unless you are using transactions  Duplicate data is possible.
  • 45.
    3 ways toadd data to a table 1. INSERT command (boring). 2. Write INSERT commands in a text file and "source" the file (better). sql> SOURCE mydata.sql 3. IMPORT command (syntax depends on DBMS): sql> LOAD DATA INFILE 'filename' INTO table ...
  • 46.
    Copying Data BetweenTables  Suppose we have another table named NewAccts  NewAccts has accountNumber, accountName, ... INSERT INTO table (field1, field2, ...) SELECT field1, field2, field3 FROM other_table WHERE condition; sql> INSERT INTO Accounts SELECT * FROM NewAccounts WHERE accountNumber NOT NULL;
  • 47.
    UPDATE statement Change valuesin one or more records: UPDATE table SET field1=value1, field2=value2 WHERE condition; sql> UPDATE city SET population=40000 WHERE name='Bangsaen' AND countrycode='THA'; Query OK, 1 row affected (0.09 sec) | name | countrycode | district | population | +----------+-------------+----------+------------------+ | 11111111 | THA | Chonburi | 40000 |
  • 48.
    UPDATE multiple columns Youcan change multiple columns: UPDATE table SET field1=value1, field2=value2 WHERE condition; sql> UPDATE country SET population=68100000, gnp=345600 WHERE code='THA'; Query OK, 1 row affected (0.09 sec) Example: Update population and GNP of Thailand Source: CIA World Factbook (on the web)
  • 49.
    Warning: don't forgetWHERE  UPDATE can change every row in a database  Make sure that your WHERE clause selects only records you want to change! sql> UPDATE country SET population=68100000, gnp=345600 ; Query OK, 240 rows affected (0.14 sec) Changed every country in the database!! Oops! I forgot "WHERE ..."
  • 50.
    Warning: UPDATE isimmediate!  Changes occur immediately. (Can't undo w/o trans.) Be Careful! If you forget the WHERE clause it will change all the rows in the table! sql> UPDATE country SET HeadOfState='Obama'; /* Oops! I forgot "WHERE ..." */ +------+----------------+-------------+--------------+ | Code | Name | Continent | HeadOfState | +------+----------------+-------------+--------------+ | AFG | Afghanistan | Asia | Obama | | NLD | Netherlands | Europe | Obama | | ALB | Albania | Europe | Obama | | DZA | Algeria | Africa | Obama | | ASM | American Samoa | Oceania | Obama | | AND | Andorra | Europe | Obama | | AGO | Angola | Africa | Obama | Obama rules!
  • 51.
    Exercise  Update theCity you added to the database.  Change its population.
  • 52.
    Deleting Records  DELETEone or more records DELETE FROM tablename WHERE condition; Example: Delete all cities with zero population sql> DELETE FROM City WHERE population <= 0; Query OK, 5 rows deleted.
  • 53.
    Warning: DELETE candelete all  DELETE affects all rows that match. DELETE FROM tablename WHERE condition; Example: Delete all cities with zero population sql> DELETE FROM City WHERE population <= 0; Query OK, 5 rows deleted.
  • 54.
    Safer Delete  FirstSELECT the key of the row you want sql> SELECT id FROM City WHERE name='Bangsaen'; 6402  If only one match, then delete using primary key sql> DELETE FROM City WHERE id=6402;
  • 55.
    Relating Tables The powerof a relational database is the ability to selectively combine data from many tables.  select data from multiple tables by matching values  Relationship can be: 1-to-1 student -> photograph 1-to-many country -> city many-to-1 city -> country many-to-many language -> country
  • 56.
    Keys Every table shouldhave a primary key that uniquely identifies each row. City ID (PK) Name CountryCode (FK) Population District Country Code (PK) Name Continent Capital ... CountryCode sql> DESCRIBE Country; +-------------+-----------+-----+-----+---------+----------------+ | Field | Type | Null| Key | Default | Extra | +-------------+-----------+-----+-----+---------+----------------+ | Code | char(3) | NO | PRI | | | | Name | char(52) | NO | | | | | ... | | | | | |
  • 57.
    Joining Tables  Relateor "join" tables using a condition.  Use "table.field" to qualify a field name: Country.code Country.name City.countrycode = Country.code 1 * City ID (PK) Name CountryCode (FK) Population District Country Code (PK) Name Continent Capital ...
  • 58.
    Example: Join Countryand City SELECT Country.Name, City.Name FROM Country, City WHERE Country.Code = City.CountryCode AND Continent = 'South America'; Country Code Name Continent Region SurfaceArea Population GNP LocalName Capital City ID Name CountryCode District Population Country.Code = City.CountryCode
  • 59.
    Use Aliases toReduce Typing c is alias for City co is alias for Country SELECT co.Name, c.Name FROM Country co, City c WHERE co.Code = c.CountryCode AND co.Continent = 'South America';
  • 60.
    Exercise: Cities inLaos SELECT co.Name, c.Name, c.Population FROM Country co, City c WHERE ... AND ...; List the city names and city populations in Laos.
  • 61.
    Exercise 1. How canwe find the name of the capital city for each country? Country Code (PK) Name Continent Region SurfaceArea Population GNP LocalName Capital City ID (PK) Name CountryCode District Population
  • 62.
    Exercise Solution List thecountry name and capital city name, for all countries in Asia. SELECT co.name, c.name AS CapitalCity FROM Country co, City c WHERE ... AND ... ;
  • 63.
    Exercise 1. How canwe join the CountryLanguage table with the County table? Country Code (PK) Name Continent Region SurfaceArea Population GNP LocalName Capital CountryLanguage CountryCode Language isOfficial Percentage FROM Country CO, CountryLanguage L WHERE ...
  • 64.
    Exercise 1. In whatcountries is the Thai language spoken? 2. By what percentage of the people? Example: SELECT CO.name, L.language, L.percentage FROM Country CO, CountryLanguage L WHERE ... AND ... ;
  • 65.
    Answer using Aliases In what countries is Chinese the official language? SELECT C.name, L.language, L.percentage FROM Country C, CountryLanguage L WHERE C.code = L.countrycode AND L.language LIKE '%Chinese' AND isOfficial = 'T'; alias for CountryLanguage you can omit table name when there is no ambiguity
  • 66.
    Exercise 1. What countriesuse English?  ORDER the results by percentage spoken, from largest to smallest %. 2. In how many countries is English the official language? Harder 3. In the world, approximately how many people speak English?  sum( C.population * L.percentage / 100 )
  • 67.
    JOIN  Joins tables Many forms:  INNER JOIN (include only matching columns)  OUTER JOIN (include all columns)  LEFT OUTER JOIN  NATURAL JOIN  CONDITION JOIN  "JOIN" means "INNER JOIN" in MySql.
  • 68.
    Example of aCondition Join  JOIN the CountryLanguage and Language tables using the country code: SELECT CO.Name, L.language, L.percentage FROM Country CO JOIN CountryLanguage L ON CO.code = L.countrycode WHERE ...;
  • 69.
    Exercise  JOIN theCountry and Language tables.  View Country name and language with "SELECT ..."  How many times is Thailand listed in the results? How can you order the results by language ?
  • 70.
    Multiple Table Join You can join many tables at one time: SELECT CO.name, C.*, L.language FROM Country CO JOIN CountryLanguage L ON CO.code = L.countrycode JOIN City C ON CO.code = C.countrycode WHERE ...; /* more conditions */
  • 71.
  • 72.
    GROUP BY ... GROUPBY ... is used when you want to apply a function (count, sum, avg) to a group of rows having a common characteristic. Example: How many countries are in each continent? SELECT continent, count(*) FROM country GROUP BY continent
  • 73.
    GROUP BY Exercise Whatis the total population of each continent?  use sum(population) and GROUP BY SELECT continent, SUM(population) FROM ... GROUP BY ...
  • 74.
    Logical operations  OR SELECT* FROM City WHERE District='Songkhla' OR District='Bangkok';  AND SELECT Name, SurfaceArea FROM Country WHERE Continent = 'Africa' AND SurfaceArea > 1000000;  NOT SELECT * FROM Accounts WHERE NOT AvailableBalance = 0;
  • 75.
    Set operations  IN SELECT* FROM City WHERE District IN ('Songkhla', 'Bangkok');
  • 76.
    Exercise for matching 1.How many countries have a government that is any form of monarchy?  match any government containing 'Monarchy'  How many are some form of monarchy, but not a Constitutional Monarchy (like Thailand)?
  • 77.
    GROUP BY ...HAVING ... GROUP BY ... used to apply a function to a group of rows having a characteristic. HAVING ... is used to put a condition on the groups. Example: What countries have more than one official lanaguage??? SELECT countrycode, count(language) FROM countrylanguage ???
  • 78.
    GROUP BY ...HAVING ... (1) First, how to count official languages in each country? SELECT countrycode, count(language) FROM countrylanguage WHERE isOfficial='T' GROUP BY countrycode
  • 79.
    GROUP BY ...HAVING ... (2) add HAVING to restrict results to count( ) > 1 SELECT countrycode, count(language) FROM countrylanguage WHERE isOfficial='T' GROUP BY countrycode HAVING count(language) > 1
  • 80.
    Getting Help Online helpfor  HELP for the mysql command  HELP for SQL statements mysql> HELP mysql> HELP SELECT If MySql doesn't have help on SQL commands, then load the "help tables" data onto your server. Download help table data from: http://dev.mysql.com/downloads in the "Documentation" section.
  • 81.
    Subqueries  Use theresult of one query as part of another query. Example: Which country has the largest population? SELECT Name, Population FROM country WHERE Population = ( SELECT max(population) FROM country); To use subqueries in MySQL you need version 4.1 or newer. Subquery
  • 82.
    Exercise  In whichcountry do people live the longest?  How long to they live? SELECT Name, LifeExpectancy FROM country WHERE LifeExpectancy = ( insert subquery here ) ;
  • 83.
    LIMIT instead ofsubquery Another way to get a "most" or "least" result:  ORDER results by what you want. Use ASC or DESC  use LIMIT 1 to limit number of results. SELECT Name, Population FROM country ORDER BY Population DESC LIMIT 1;
  • 84.
    Exercise  Which nationis the most crowded?  Find the country with maximum population density (population per sq. km.)  Show the name and the population density Hint: create an alias for a computed field: sql> SELECT name, population/surfaceArea AS density WHERE ... Alias: density := population/surfaceArea
  • 85.
    Exercise Is Thailand richerthan other countries in Southest Asia?  List the name and GNP/population (=wealth) of countries in the same region as Thailand.  use a subquery for "the region of Thailand": SELECT ... FROM Country WHERE region = (SELECT region WHERE ...) ORDER BY ...; order the results by wealth
  • 86.
    Exercise: increasing wealth Thailandhas decided to annex (invade) either Cambodia, Laus, Vietnam, or Malaysia. The invaded country will become part of the new Thailand. The government wants the combined country to be wealthier than Thailand is now. "wealth" means GNP/population. What country should Thailand invade?
  • 87.
    Data Definition Commands Thesecommands alter the structure of a database CREATE create a Table, Index, or Database ALTER modify structure of a Database or Table DROP delete an entire Table, Index, or Database RENAME rename a Table
  • 88.
    Creating a Table Toadd a new table to a database: CREATE TABLE tablename (field1, field2, ... ) options ; sql> CREATE TABLE CUSTOMER ( accountNumber VARCHAR(8) NOT NULL, clientID VARCHAR(40) NOT NULL, balance DOUBLE DEFAULT '0', availableBalance DOUBLE DEFAULT '0' ) ; Query OK, 0 rows affected.
  • 89.
    Productivity Hint  Typethe "CREATE TABLE" statement into a file.  "source" the file in mysql: source filename; CREATE TABLE CUSTOMER ( accountNumber CHAR(10) NOT NULL, clientID VARCHAR(40) NOT NULL, balance DOUBLE DEFAULT '0', availableBalance DOUBLE DEFAULT '0', PRIMARY KEY( clientID ) ) ; File: /temp/create-table.sql sql> SOURCE /temp/create-table.sql; Query OK, 0 rows affected.
  • 90.
    Deleting Records aTable You must specify a "WHERE" clause for rows to delete. If there is no "WHERE", it deletes all rows !! DELETE FROM tablename WHERE condition ; -- first use SELECT to verify condition sql> SELECT * FROM city WHERE name="Bangsaen"; sql> DELETE FROM city WHERE name="Bangsaen"; Query OK, 1 row affected.
  • 91.
    Exercise  Delete thecity you added to the City table.  On a friend's machine, is it deleted immediately?
  • 92.
    Deleting a Table Removea table from the database DROP TABLE tablename ; sql> DROP TABLE CUSTOMER ;
  • 93.
    Views  A Viewis like a "virtual table" containing selected data from one or more real tables. Country Name Continent Code ... CountryLan guage Language Percentage isOfficial ... MyView Name Language Percentage CREATE VIEW MyView AS ...
  • 94.
    View Example Create aview for country name, languages, and percentage. sql> CREATE VIEW lang AS SELECT name, language, percentage FROM Country C, CountryLanguage L WHERE C.code = L.countrycode ORDER BY language ASC; Query OK, 0 rows affected. sql> SELECT * FROM lang WHERE language='Thai'; Use the view to browse data:
  • 95.
    Productivity Hint  Typethe "CREATE VIEW" statement into a file.  Read the file into mysql: source filename; CREATE VIEW lang AS SELECT name, language, percentage FROM Country C, CountryLanguage L WHERE C.code = L.countrycode; File: langview.sql sql> SOURCE langview.sql; Query OK, 0 rows affected.
  • 96.
    Exercise  Create aview that shows these fields: City.name as name Country.name as country Region Population of the city Official language id of the city  Each person should use a different name for his view, to avoid interfering with each other.  List the tables in world ( show tables ).
  • 97.
    Exercise  List thecities in Southest Asia where English is the official language and population is over 100,000.
  • 98.
    Exercise  Ask MySQLto "describe" your view.  Delete your view: DROP VIEW viewname ;
  • 99.
    Review What is thecommand to ... 1. list all the databases that you have access to? 2. use the Bank database? 3. view a list of tables in Bank? 4. view the structure of the Accounts table?
  • 100.
  • 101.
    Vocabulary  "largest" and"smallest" refer to size (surfaceArea).  "most populous", "least populous" refer to population and population > 0. (exclude unpopulated nations)  "richest", "poorest" means GNP per capita not total GNP, and GNP > 0 (GNP = 0 means no data).  "most crowded" refers to population/surfaceArea
  • 102.
    Language Hints  "Fortranis an official language" means its an official language of the country  "Pascal is spoken unofficially" means it is spoken, but not an official language  "COBOL is spoken" means COBOL is a language and percentage > 0
  • 103.
    What is theWorld's Smallest Nation? How big is it?
  • 104.
    What is theLargest Country in Africa?  Show the SQL  How big is it?
  • 105.
    What are thePoorest Countries in Asia?  must have GNP data (GNP > 0)  List 3 poorest nations.  What is the GNP per person? NOTE: GNP is measured in $1,000,000. Multiply your answer by 1,000,000 to get US$.
  • 106.
    What is theRichest Country in the Middle East (region)?  What is the GNP per person?  Show result is US$ (not million).  Round the income to nearest dollar!  WRONG: 12345.6789 NOTE: GNP is database is measured in $1,000,000. Multiply your answer by 1,000,000 to get US$.
  • 107.
    In what countriesis Thai spoken? SELECT ... FROM Country C JOIN CountryLanguage L ON C.code = L.countrycode WHERE ...
  • 108.
    How many peoplespeak English? 2 queries:  how many in each country  total for world SELECT ... FROM Country C JOIN CountryLanguage L ON C.code = L.countrycode WHERE ...
  • 109.
    History of Empiresthrough Language Empires are cultures that spread over many countries. We can detect past Empires by the spread of language.  What languages are spoken in greatest number of countries?  Can you name the Empire?
  • 110.
    History of Empiresthrough Language We can detect past Empires by the spread of language.  What languages are spoken in greatest number of countries? SELECT L.language, sum(L.percentage*C.population) AS sum FROM Country C JOIN CountryLanguage L ON C.code = L.countrycode GROUP BY L.language ORDER BY sum DESC
  • 111.
    What cities havea population > 6M ?  Print city name, population, and country name  Sort by population -- largest first +-----------------+------------+-------------------------+ | name | population | country_name | +-----------------+------------+-------------------------+ ... | Bangkok | 6320174 | Thailand | ...
  • 112.
    Where is Darithe Official Language? In what country is Dari the official language?
  • 113.
    4 official languages? Whatcountry in Europe has 4 official languages? SELECT ... FROM Country C JOIN CountryLanguage L ON C.code = L.countrycode WHERE ... GROUP BY C.code -- group by country HAVING ...
  • 114.
    Resources MySQL  http://dev.mysql.com/tech-resources/articles/ Learning SQL http://www.w3schools.com/sql/ nice tutorial and command reference