SELECT
selection
table-expression
|
A select-expression specifies
a result table. It is used in the following Natural SQL statements:
INSERT |
SELECT |
UPDATE
This document covers the following topics:
|
|
|
|
|
|
, |
|
||
* |
||||||||
A selection specifies the columns of the result
set tables to be selected.
Syntax Element Description:
| Syntax Element | Description |
|---|---|
ALL|DISTINCT |
Elimination of Duplicate Rows:
Duplicate rows are not automatically eliminated from the result of a
The alternative to |
scalar-expression |
Scalar Expression:
Instead of, or as well as, simple column names, a selection can also include general scalar expressions containing scalar operators and scalar functions which provide computed values (see also the section Scalar Expressions). Example: SELECT NAME, 65 - AGE FROM SQL-PERSONNEL ... |
AS |
The optional keyword AS introduces a correlation-name for a
column.
|
correlation-name |
Correlation Name:
A The |
unpack-row |
See unpack-row below. |
* |
Asterisk Notation:
All columns of the result table are selected. Example: SELECT * FROM SQL-PERSONNEL, SQL-AUTOMOBILES ... |
UNPACK (scalar-expression) .* AS ({field-name
data-type} , |
An unpack-row specifies a row of unpacked
binary values that are returned when the SQL UNPACK function is invoked. The number of
field-names and data-types must
match the number of fields returned by the UNPACK function.
| from-clause [where-clause] |
| [group-by-clause] [having-clause] |
| [order-by-clause] [fetch-first-clause] |
The table-expression
specifies from where and according to what criteria rows are to be
selected.
The following topics are covered below:
FROM
table-reference,…
|
This clause specifies from which tables the result set is built.
The tables specified in the FROM clause must contain
the column fields used in the selection list.
You can either specify a single table or produce an intermediate table resulting from a subquery or a "join" operation (see below).
Since various tables (that is, DDMs) can be addressed in one
FROM clause and since a
table-expression can contain several
FROM clauses if subqueries
are specified, the database ID (DBID) of the first DDM specified in the first
FROM clause of the whole expression is used to identify the
underlying database involved.
The TABLE function-name
clause belongs to the SQL Extended
Set and requires a
correlation-clause
with a column-name list.
The period-specification
clause belongs to the SQL Extended
Set.
FOR
|
|
|
|
|
period-specification
optionally specifies that a period specification applies to the temporal table
table-name. The same period name
(SYSTEM_TIME or BUSINESS_TIME) must not be specified
more than one time for the same table.
Optionally, a
correlation-clause can be assigned to a
table-name. For a
subquery, a
correlation-clause must be
assigned.
[AS]
correlation-name
[(column-name,...)]
|
A correlation-clause
consists of optional keyword AS and a
correlation-name
and is optionally followed by a plain
column-name
list. The column-name list belongs to
the SQL Extended
Set.
|
|
table-reference |
|
|
|
|
|
JOIN
table-reference
ON
join-condition |
|
| (joined-table) | ||||||||
A joined-table specifies
an intermediate table resulting from a "join" operation.
The "join" can be an INNER, LEFT
OUTER, RIGHT OUTER or FULL OUTER
JOIN. If you do not specify anything, INNER
applies.
Multiple "join" operations can be nested; that is,
the tables which create the intermediate result table can themselves be
intermediate result tables of a "join" operation or a
subquery; and the latter, in turn, can
also have a joined-table or another
subquery in its FROM
clause.
For INNER, LEFT OUTER, and RIGHT
OUTER joins:
search-condition |
For FULL OUTER joins:
full-join-expression =
full-join-expression [AND
|
|
|
column-name |
|
|||
|
|
|
|
(column-name
,
|
||
Within a
join-expression only
column-names and the
scalar-function
VALUE
(or its synonym
COALESCE)
are allowed.
See details on column-name.
The
data-change-table-reference clause
belongs to the SQL Extended
Set.
|
|
FINAL TABLE (INSERT-statement)
|
|
|||
|
|
|
TABLE
(searched-UPDATE-statement)
|
|||
OLD TABLE (searched-DELETE-statement)
|
|||||
FINAL TABLE (MERGE-statement)
|
|||||
A
data-change-table-reference specifies
an intermediate result table, which is based on the rows that are changed by
the SQL change statement specified in the clause. A
data-change-table-reference can only be
specified as the only table reference in the FROM clause.
Syntax Element Description:
The xmltable-function
clause belongs to the SQL Extended
Set.
The item
xmltable-function specifies an
invocation of the built-in XMLTABLE function.
[WHERE
search-condition]
|
The WHERE clause is used to specify the selection
criteria (search-condition) for the
rows to be selected.
Example:
DEFINE DATA LOCAL 01 NAME (A20) 01 AGE (I2) END-DEFINE ... SELECT * INTO NAME, AGE FROM SQL-PERSONNEL WHERE AGE = 32 END-SELECT ...
For further information, see Search Conditions.
|
|
GROUP
BY |
|
|
,
|
|
The GROUP BY clause specifies a grouping of the
result table. The result of GROUP BY is a set of groups of rows.
Within each group of more than one row, all values defining the group are
equal.
- grouping-expression
A grouping expression is a scalar expression that defines the grouping of a result set.
- grouping-set
GROUPING SETS(
, ) (
, ) A
grouping-setis used to specify multiple grouping clauses in a single statement. Agrouping-setcombines two or more groups of rows into a single result set. It is the same as the union of multiple select expressions with aGROUP BYclause where each expression corresponds to onegrouping-set. Agrouping-setis a single element or a list of elements delimited by parentheses. An element is either agrouping–expressionor asuper-group. Agrouping-sethas the advantage that the groups are computed with a single pass over the base table.- super-group
(grouping-expression-list)
(grouping-expression-list
( )A
super-groupis a more complexgrouping-set.A
grouping-expression-listdefines the number of elements used in aROLLUPorCUBEoperation. Elements with multiplegrouping-expressionsare delimited by parentheses:
grouping-expression
, (grouping-expression, )
ROLLUPandCUBEreturn a row which is the overall (grand total) aggregation. This can be specified with empty parentheses( )within theGROUPING SETSclause.
- ROLLUP
A
ROLLUPgrouping is like a series ofgrouping-sets. In addition to the regular grouped rows, aROLLUPgrouping produces a result set that contains subtotal rows. Subtotal rows are "super-aggregate" rows which contain additional aggregates. The aggregate values are retrieved with the same column functions that are used to obtain the regular grouped rows.In general, you specify a
ROLLUPwithnelements asGROUP BY ROLLUP (c1, c2, ..., cn-1, cn)which is the equivalent of:
GROUP BY GROUPING SETS ((c1, c2, ..., cn-1, cn), (c1, c2, ..., cn-1), ... (c1, c2), (c1), ( ))- CUBE
A
CUBEgrouping is like a series ofgrouping-sets. In addition to theROLLUPaggregation rows,CUBEproduces a result set that contains cross-tabulation rows. Cross-tabulation rows are additional "super-aggregate" rows. Thegrouping-expression-listof aCUBEcomputes all permutations along with the grand total. As a result, thenelements of aCUBEtranslate to 2**ngrouping-sets. For example:GROUP BY CUBE (a, b, c)is the equivalent of:
GROUP BY GROUPING SETS ((a, b, c), (a, b), (a, c), (b, c), (a), (b), (c), ())
[HAVING
search-condition]
|
If the HAVING clause is specified, the GROUP
BY clause should also be specified.
Just as the WHERE clause is used to exclude rows from
a result table, the HAVING clause is used to exclude groups and
therefore also based on a
search-condition. Scalar expressions in
a HAVING clause must be single-valued per group.
For further information, see Scalar Expressions and Search Conditions.
Example:
DEFINE DATA LOCAL 1 #NAME (A20) 1 #AVGAGE (I2) 1 #NUMBER (I2) END-DEFINE ... SELECT NAME, AVG(AGE), COUNT(*) INTO #NAME, #AVGAGE, #NUMBER FROM SQL-PERSONNEL GROUP BY NAME HAVING COUNT(*) > 1 ...
ORDER BY
|
|
sort-key |
|
|
|
, |
|
INPUT SEQUENCE |
|||||||
ORDER OF
table-designator |
|||||||
The order-by
clause specifies row ordering of the result table.
|
|
column-name |
|
| integer | ||
| sort-key-expression |
A sort-key-expression is
an expression which is more than a
column-name or an unsigned
integer constant.
INPUT SEQUENCE belongs to the
SQL Extended Set.
INPUT SEQUENCE indicates that the result table
reflects the input order of the rows specified in the VALUES
clause of an INSERT statement.
INPUT SEQUENCE can only be specified if an
INSERT statement is specified in the
from-clause.
ORDER OF table-designator
belongs to the SQL Extended
Set.
ORDER OF specifies that the row ordering of the
designated table by the
table-designator is applied to the
result table of the query.
table-designator uniquely
identifies a base table, a view, or the nested table expression of a subselect.
The fetch-first
clause belongs to the SQL Extended
Set.
|
|
FETCH FIRST
|
|
1integer |
|
|
ROWSROW |
|
ONLY
|
|
The fetch-first
clause limits the number of rows that can be fetched. It improves the
performance of queries when only a limited number of rows are needed.
Example 1:
DEFINE DATA LOCAL
01 #NAME (A20)
01 #FIRSTNAME (A15)
01 #AGE (I2)
...
END-DEFINE
...
SELECT NAME, FIRSTNAME, AGE
INTO #NAME, #FIRSTNAME, #AGE
FROM SQL-PERSONNEL
WHERE NAME IS NOT NULL
AND AGE > 20
...
DISPLAY #NAME #FIRSTNAME #AGE
END-SELECT
...
END
Example 2:
DEFINE DATA LOCAL 01 #COUNT (I4) ... END-DEFINE ... SELECT SINGLE COUNT(*) INTO #COUNT FROM SQL-PERSONNEL ...