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Class -1 Introduction to SQL Querying

Here we will discuss about the following topics:

What is SQL?
Why SQL
Table basics
Table Constraints
Selecting data
Creating tables
Data Types
Predicate operations (Where Clause)
Order By

What is SQL?
SQL is Structured Query Language, which is a computer language for storing, manipulating
and retrieving data stored in relational database.
SQL is the standard language for Relation Database System. All relational database
management systems like MySQL, MS Access, Oracle, Sybase, Informix, postgres and SQL
Server use SQL as standard database language.
Also, they are using different dialects, such as:

MS SQL Server using T-SQL,

Oracle using PL/SQL,

MS Access version of SQL is called JET SQL native format etc.

Why SQL?

Allows users to access data in relational database management systems.

Allows users to describe the data.

Allows users to define the data in database and manipulate that data.

Allows embedding within other languages using SQL modules, libraries & precompilers.

Allows users to create and drop databases and tables.

Allows users to create view, stored procedure, functions in a database.

Allows users to set permissions on tables, procedures, and views


SQL Process:

When you are executing an SQL command for any RDBMS, the system determines the best
way to carry out your request and SQL engine figures out how to interpret the task.
There are various components included in the process. These components are Query
Dispatcher, Optimization Engines, Classic Query Engine and SQL Query Engine, etc. Classic
query engine handles all non-SQL queries but SQL query engine won't handle logical files.

Following is a simple diagram showing SQL Architecture:

SQL Commands:
The standard SQL commands to interact with relational databases are CREATE, SELECT,
INSERT, UPDATE, DELETE and DROP. These commands can be classified into groups based
on their nature:
DDL - Data Definition Language:
CREATE

Creates a new table, a view of a table, or other object in database

ALTER Modifies an existing database object, such as a table.


DROP Deletes an entire table, a view of a table or other object in the database.
DML - Data Manipulation Language:
SELECT

Retrieves certain records from one or more tables

INSERT

Creates a record

UPDATE Modifies records


DELETE
Deletes records
DCL - Data Control Language:
GRANT
REVOKE

Gives a privilege to user


Takes back privileges granted from user

What is table?
The data in RDBMS is stored in database objects called tables. The table is a collection of
related data entries and it consists of columns and rows.
Remember, a table is the most common and simplest form of data storage in a relational
database.
Following is the example of a CUSTOMERS table:
+----+----------+-----+-----------+----------+
| ID | NAME

| AGE | ADDRESS | SALARY |

+----+----------+-----+-----------+----------+
| 1 | Ramesh | 32 | Ahmedabad | 2000.00 |
| 2 | Khilan | 25 | Delhi
| 3 | kaushik | 23 | Kota

| 1500.00 |
| 2000.00 |

+----+----------+-----+-----------+----------+
What is field?
Every table is broken up into smaller entities called fields. The fields in the CUSTOMERS
table consist of ID, NAME, AGE, ADDRESS and SALARY.
A field is a column in a table that is designed to maintain specific information about every
record in the table.
What is record or row?
A record, also called a row of data, is each individual entry that exists in a table. For
example there are 7 records in the above CUSTOMERS table. Following is a single row of
data or record in the CUSTOMERS table:
+----+----------+-----+-----------+----------+
| 1 | Ramesh | 32 | Ahmedabad | 2000.00 |
+----+----------+-----+-----------+----------+
A record is a horizontal entity in a table.
What is column?
A column is a vertical entity in a table that contains all information associated with a
specific field in a table.
For example, a column in the CUSTOMERS table is ADDRESS, which represents location
description and would consist of the following:

+-----------+| ADDRESS |+-----------+


| Ahmedabad |
| Delhi

| Kota

+----+------+
What is NULL value?
A NULL value in a table is a value in a field that appears to be blank, which means a field
with a NULL value is a field with no value.
It is very important to understand that a NULL value is different than a zero value or a field
that contains spaces. A field with a NULL value is one that has been left blank during
record creation.
SQL Constraints:
Constraints are the rules enforced on data columns on table. These are used to limit the
type of data that can go into a table. This ensures the accuracy and reliability of the data
in the database.
Constraints could be column level or table level. Column level constraints are applied only
to one column whereas table level constraints are applied to the whole table.
Following are commonly used constraints available in SQL:

NOT NULL Constraint: Ensures that a column cannot have NULL value.

DEFAULT Constraint: Provides a default value for a column when none is specified.

UNIQUE Constraint: Ensures that all values in a column are different.

PRIMARY Key: Uniquely identified each rows/records in a database table.

FOREIGN Key: Uniquely identified a rows/records in any another database table.

CHECK Constraint: The CHECK constraint ensures that all values in a column satisfy
certain conditions.

INDEX: Use to create and retrieve data from the database very quickly.

Data Integrity:
The following categories of the data integrity exist with each RDBMS:
Entity Integrity: There are no duplicate rows in a table.
Domain Integrity: Enforces valid entries for a given column by restricting the
type, the format, or the range of values.
Referential integrity: Rows cannot be deleted, which are used by other records.

User-Defined Integrity: Enforces some specific business rules that do not fall into
entity, domain or referential integrity.

Selecting data:
The select statement is used to query the database and retrieve selected data that match
the criteria that you specify. Here is the format of a simple select statement:
select "column1"
[,"column2",etc]
from "tablename"
[where "condition"];
[] = optional
A SQL SELECT statement can be broken down into numerous elements, each beginning
with a keyword. Although it is not necessary, common convention is to write these
keywords in all capital letters. In this article, we will focus on the most fundamental and
common elements of a SELECT statement, namely

SELECT

FROM

WHERE

ORDER BY

The SELECT ... FROM Clause


The most basic SELECT statement has only 2 parts: (1) what columns you want to return
and (2) what table(s) those columns come from.
If we want to retrieve all of the information about all of the customers in the Employees
table, we could use the asterisk (*) as a shortcut for all of the columns, and our query
looks like

SELECT * FROM Employees

If we want only specific columns (as is usually the case), we can/should explicitly specify
them in a comma-separated list, as in which results in the specified fields of data for all of
the rows in the table:

SELECT EmployeeID, FirstName, LastName, HireDate, City FROM Employees

Explicitly specifying the desired fields also allows us to control the order in which the fields
are returned, so that if we wanted the last name to appear before the first name, we could
write
SELECT EmployeeID, LastName, FirstName, HireDate, City FROM Employees

The WHERE Clause


The next thing we want to do is to start limiting, or filtering, the data we fetch from the
database. By adding a WHERE clause to the SELECT statement, we add one (or more)
conditions that must be met by the selected data. This will limit the number of rows that
answer the query and are fetched. In many cases, this is where most of the "action" of a
query takes place.
We can continue with our previous query, and limit it to only those employees living in
London:
SELECT EmployeeID, FirstName, LastName, HireDate, City FROM Employees WHERE City = 'London'

Resulting in

If you wanted to get the opposite, the employees who do not live in London, you would
write

SELECT EmployeeID, FirstName, LastName, HireDate, City FROM Employees WHERE City <> 'London'

It is not necessary to test for equality; you can also use the standard equality/inequality
operators that you would expect. For example, to get a list of employees who were hired
on or after a given date, you would write

SELECT EmployeeID, FirstName, LastName, HireDate, City FROM Employees WHERE HireDate >= '1-july-1993'

and get the resulting rows

Of course, we can write more complex conditions. The obvious way to do this is by having
multiple conditions in the WHERE clause. If we want to know which employees were hired
between two given dates, we could write

SELECT
WHERE

EmployeeID, FirstName, LastName, HireDate, City FROM


Employees
(HireDate >= '1-june-1992') AND (HireDate <= '15-december-1993')

resulting in

Note that SQL also has a special BETWEEN operators that checks to see if a value is
between two values (including equality on both ends). This allows us to rewrite the
previous query as

SELECT
WHERE

EmployeeID, FirstName, LastName, HireDate, City FROM


Employees
HireDate BETWEEN '1-june-1992' AND '15-december-1993'

We could also use the NOT operator, to fetch those rows that are not between the
specified dates:

SELECT
WHERE

EmployeeID, FirstName, LastName, HireDate, City FROM


Employees
HireDate NOT BETWEEN '1-june-1992' AND '15-december-1993'

Let us finish this section on the WHERE clause by looking at two additional, slightly more
sophisticated, comparison operators.
What if we want to check if a column value is equal to more than one value? If it is only 2
values, then it is easy enough to test for each of those values, combining them with the
OR operator and writing something like

SELECT EmployeeID, FirstName, LastName, HireDate, City FROM Employees


WHERE City = 'London' OR City = 'Seattle'

However, if there are three, four, or more values that we want to compare against, the
above approach quickly becomes messy. In such cases, we can use the IN operator to test
against a set of values. If we wanted to see if the City was either Seattle, Tacoma, or
Redmond, we would write

SELECT EmployeeID, FirstName, LastName, HireDate, City FROM Employees


WHERE City IN ('Seattle', 'Tacoma', 'Redmond')

producing the results shown below.

As with the BETWEEN operator, here too we can reverse the results obtained and query
for those rows where City is not in the specified list:

SELECT EmployeeID, FirstName, LastName, HireDate, City FROM Employees


WHERE City NOT IN ('Seattle', 'Tacoma', 'Redmond')

Finally, the LIKE operator allows us to perform basic pattern-matching using wildcard
characters. For Microsoft SQL Server, the wildcard characters are defined as follows:

_
(underscor

matches any single character

matches a string of one or more characters

[]

matches any single character within the specified range (e.g. [a-f]) or set
(e.g. [abcdef]).

[^]

matches any single character not within the specified range (e.g. [^a-f]) or
set (e.g. [^abcdef]).

A few examples should help clarify these rules.

WHERE FirstName LIKE '_im' finds all three-letter first names that end with 'im'
(e.g. Jim, Tim).

WHERE LastName LIKE '%stein' finds all employees whose last name ends with
'stein'

WHERE LastName LIKE '%stein%' finds all employees whose last name includes
'stein' anywhere in the name.

WHERE FirstName LIKE '[JT]im' finds three-letter first names that end with 'im' and
begin with either 'J' or 'T' (that is, only Jim and Tim)

WHERE LastName LIKE 'm[^c]%' finds all last names beginning with 'm' where the
following (second) letter is not 'c'.

Here too, we can opt to use the NOT operator: to find all of the employees whose first
name does not start with 'M' or 'A', we would write

SELECT EmployeeID, FirstName, LastName, HireDate, City FROM Employees WHERE (FirstName NOT LIKE 'M%')
AND (FirstName NOT LIKE 'A%')

resulting in

The ORDER BY Clause


Until now, we have been discussing filtering the data: that is, defining the conditions that
determine which rows will be included in the final set of rows to be fetched and returned
from the database. Once we have determined which columns and rows will be included in
the results of our SELECT query, we may want to control the order in which the rows
appearsorting the data.
To sort the data rows, we include the ORDER BY clause. The ORDER BY clause includes
one or more column names that specify the sort order. If we return to one of our
firstSELECT statements, we can sort its results by City with the following statement:

SELECT EmployeeID, FirstName, LastName, HireDate, City FROM Employees


ORDER BY City

By default, the sort order for a column is ascending (from lowest value to highest value),
as shown below for the previous query:

If we want the sort order for a column to be descending, we can include


the DESC keyword after the column name.

The ORDER BY clause is not limited to a single column. You can include a commadelimited list of columns to sort bythe rows will all be sorted by the first column
specified and then by the next column specified. If we add the Country field to
the SELECT clause and want to sort by Country and City, we would write:

SELECT EmployeeID, FirstName, LastName, HireDate, Country, City FROM Employees


ORDER BY Country, City DESC

Note that to make it interesting, we have specified the sort order for the City column to be
descending (from highest to lowest value). The sort order for the Country column is still
ascending. We could be more explicit about this by writing

SELECT EmployeeID, FirstName, LastName, HireDate, Country, City FROM Employees


ORDER BY Country ASC, City DESC

but this is not necessary and is rarely done. The results returned by this query are

It is important to note that a column does not need to be included in the list of selected
(returned) columns in order to be used in the ORDER BY clause. If we don't need to
see/use the Country values, but are only interested in them as the primary sorting field we
could write the query as

SELECT EmployeeID, FirstName, LastName, HireDate, City FROM Employees


ORDER BY Country ASC, City DESC

with the results being sorted in the same order as before:

SQL data types:


The columns named 8, 9, 10 and 11 indicates SQL Server version data type support where
8 = SQL Server 2000
9 = SQL Server 2005
10 = SQL Server 2008
11 = SQL Server 2012

DATATY
PE

STORAGE

8 9

1
0

1
1

TYP
E

MIN

MAX

Bigint

-2^63

2^63-1

8 bytes

Exact

Int

-2,147,483,648

2,147,483,647

4 bytes

Exact

Smallint

-32,768

32,767

2 bytes

Exact

Tinyint

255

1 bytes

Exact

Bit

1 to 8 bit columns
in the same table
requires a total of
1 byte, 9 to 16 bits

Exact

NOTES

DATATY
PE

MIN

MAX

STORAGE

8 9

1
0

1
1

TYP
E

NOTES

= 2 bytes, etc...
Decimal

-10^38+1

10^381

Precision 1-9 = 5
bytes, precision
10-19 = 9 bytes,
precision 20-28 =
13 bytes, precision
29-38 = 17 bytes

Exact

The Decimal and the


Numeric data type is
exactly the same. Precision
is the total number of
digits. Scale is the number
of decimals. For both the
minimum is 1 and the
maximum is 38.

Numeric

same as
Decimal

same as
Decimal

same as Decimal

Exact

Money

-2^63 / 10000

2^63-1 / 10000

8 bytes

Exact

Smallmoney

-214,748.3648

214,748.3647

4 bytes

Exact

Float

-1.79E + 308

1.79E + 308

4 bytes when
precision is less
than 25 and 8
bytes when
precision is 25
through 53

Approx Precision is specified from 1


to 53.

Real

-3.40E + 38

3.40E + 38

4 bytes

Approx Precision is fixed to 7.

Datetime

1753-01-01
00:00:00.000

9999-12-31
23:59:59.997

8 bytes

Dateti
me

Smalldateti
me

1900-01-01
00:00

2079-06-06
23:59

4 bytes

Dateti
me

Date

0001-01-01

9999-12-31

3 bytes

Time

00:00:00.00000 23:59:59.99999 time(0-2) = 3


00
99
bytes, time(3-4) =
4 bytes, time(5-7)
= 5 bytes

Datetime2

If you are running SQL


Server 2008 or later and
need milliseconds precision,
use datetime2(3) instead to
save 1 byte.

n
o

n
o

Dateti
me

n
o

n
o

Dateti
me

Specifying the precision is


possible. TIME(3) will have
milliseconds precision.
TIME(7) is the highest and
the default precision.
Casting values to a lower
precision will round the
value.

0001-01-01
9999-12-31
Presicion 1-2 = 6
n
00:00:00.00000 23:59:59.99999 bytes precision 3-4 o
00
99
= 7 bytes
precision 5-7 = 8
bytes

n
o

Dateti
me

Combines the date


datatype and the time
datatype into one. The
precision logic is the same
as for the time datatype.

Datetimeoffs 0001-01-01
9999-12-31
Presicion 1-2 = 8
n
et
00:00:00.00000 23:59:59.99999 bytes precision 3-4 o
00 -14:00
99 +14:00
= 9 bytes
precision 5-7 = 10
bytes

n
o

Dateti
me

Is a datetime2 datatype
with the UTC offset
appended.

DATATY
PE

MIN

MAX

STORAGE

8 9

1
0

1
1

TYP
E

NOTES

Char

0 chars

8000 chars

Defined width

String

Fixed width

Varchar

0 chars

8000 chars

2 bytes + number
of chars

String

Variable width

Varchar(max 0 chars
)

2^31 chars

2 bytes + number
of chars

String

Variable width

Text

0 chars

2,147,483,647
chars

4 bytes + number
of chars

String

Variable width

Nchar

0 chars

4000 chars

Defined width x 2

Unicod
e

Fixed width

Nvarchar

0 chars

4000 chars

Unicod
e

Variable width

Nvarchar(ma 0 chars
x)

2^30 chars

Unicod
e

Variable width

Ntext

0 chars

1,073,741,823
chars

Unicod
e

Variable width

Binary

0 bytes

8000 bytes

Binary

Fixed width

Varbinary

0 bytes

8000 bytes

Binary

Variable width

Varbinary(m
ax)

0 bytes

2^31 bytes

Binary

Variable width

Image

0 bytes

2,147,483,647
bytes

Binary

Variable width. Prefer to use


the varbinary(max) type as
the image type will be
removed in future versions.

Other

Stores values of various


SQL Server-supported data
types, except text, ntext,
and timestamp.

n
o

n
o

n
o

Sql_variant

Timestamp

8 bytes

Other

Stores a database-wide
unique number that gets
updated every time a row
gets updated.

Uniqueidenti
fier

16 bytes

Other

Stores a globally unique


identifier (GUID).

Other

Stores XML data. You can


store xml instances in a
column or a variable.

Xml

Creating Tables:

n
o

The create table statement is used to create a new table. Here is the format of a
simple create table statement:
create table "tablename"
("column1" "data type",
"column2" "data type",
"column3" "data type");
Format of create table if you were to use optional constraints:
create table "tablename"
("column1" "data type"
[constraint],
"column2" "data type"
[constraint],
"column3" "data type"
[constraint]);
[ ] = optional
Note: You may have as many columns as you'd like, and the constraints are optional.
Example:
create table employee
(first varchar(15),
last varchar(20),
age number(3),
address varchar(30),
city varchar(20),
state varchar(20));
To create a new table, enter the keywords create table followed by the table name,
followed by an open parenthesis, followed by the first column name, followed by the data
type for that column, followed by any optional constraints, and followed by a closing
parenthesis. It is important to make sure you use an open parenthesis before the
beginning table and a closing parenthesis after the end of the last column definition. Make
sure you separate each column definition with a comma. All SQL statements should end
with a ";".
The table and column names must start with a letter and can be followed by letters,
numbers, or underscores - not to exceed a total of 30 characters in length. Do not use any
SQL reserved keywords as names for tables or column names (such as "select", "create",
"insert", etc.).
Data types specify what the type of data can be for that particular column. If a column
called "Last_Name", is to be used to hold names, then that particular column should have
a "varchar" (variable-length character) data type.

Exercise:
Table: EMP
EMPN
O

Table: DEPT

ENAM
E

JOB

7369

SMITH

7499

ALLEN

7521

WARD

7566

JONES

7654

MARTIN

MANAGER
SALESMA
N

7698

BLAKE

MANAGER

7782

CLARK

MANAGER

7788

SCOTT

7839
7844

KING
TURNE
R

ANALYST
PRESIDEN
T
SALESMA
N

7876

ADAMS

CLERK

7900

JAMES

CLERK

7902

FORD

ANALYST

7934

MILLER

CLERK

1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.

Display
Display
Display
Display
Display
Display
Where

CLERK
SALESMA
N
SALESMA
N

MG
R
790
2
769
8
769
8
783
9
769
8
783
9
783
9
756
6
769
8
778
8
769
8
756
6
778
2

HIREDAT
E
17-Dec80
20-Feb-81
22-Feb-81
2-Apr-81
28-Sep81
1-May-81
9-Jun-81
9-Dec-82
17-Nov81
8-Sep-81
12-Jan-83
3-Dec-81
3-Dec-81
23-Jan-82

SAL
800
160
0
125
0
297
5
125
0
285
0
245
0
300
0
500
0
150
0
110
0
950
300
0
130
0

COM
M

DEPTN
O

DEPTN
O

20
300
500

1400

LOC

10

DNAME
ACCOUNTIN
G

30

20

RESEARCH

DALLAS

30

30

SALES

CHICAGO

20

40

OPERATIONS

BOSTON

NEW YORK

30
30
10

20

Table: SALGRADE

10

GRADE

30

700

1200

20

1201

1400

30

1401

2000

20

2001

3000

10

3001

9999

LOSAL

HISAL

ENAME, JOB from table EMP


ENAME, SAL from table EMP
all columns and rows from table EMP
all columns and rows from table DEPT
ENAME and ANNUAL SALARY from table EMP (Annual Salary is 12times SAL)
current user name
clause / operators

7. Display ENAME for employees working in department 10


8. Display EMPNO, ENAME for employees who earn commission
9. Display ENAME for employees who do not earn any commission
10.Display the names of employees who are not working as MANAGER
11.Display those employees whose salary is more than 3000 after giving 20% increment
12.Display names of all employees working as CLERK and drawing a salary more than
3000
13.Display names of employees who are working as CLERK, SALESMAN or ANALYST and
drawing salary more than 3000
14.Display the names of employees working in department number 10 or 20 or 40 or
employees working as CLERK, SALESMAN or ANALYST

15.Display the names of employees who are not working as SALESMAN or CLERK or
ANALYST
16.Display the names of employees who are working in the company for the past 5 years
17.Display the list of employees who have joined the company before 30th June 90 or after
31st Dec 90
18.Display names of employees from table EMP whose name starts with letter S
19.Display names of employees from table EMP whose name ends with letter S
20.Display names of employees from table EMP having second letter A in their JOB
21.Display names of employees whose name is exactly five characters in length
22.Display names of employees whose job start with letter A, ends with letter S and is 4
characters in length
23.Display those department whose name start with"S" while location name ends with "K"
Order by clause
24.Display details of all the employees and output should have highest comm row
displayed at end
25.Display details of all the employees and output should have highest comm row
displayed on top
26.Display the names of employees in order of commission(comm) i.e. the name of the
employee earning lowest commission(comm) should appear first
27.Display the names of employees in order of commission(comm) i.e. the name of the
employee earning highest commission(comm) should appear last
28.Display the names of employees in descending order of commission(comm) i.e., the
name of the employee earning highest commission(comm) should appear first
29.Display the names of employees in descending order of commission(comm) i.e., the
name of the employee earning lowest commission(comm) should appear last
30.Display the details from EMP table in order of employee name
31.Display EMPNO, ENAME, DEPTNO and SAL. Sort the output based on DEPTNO and then
by SAL
32.Display employee details from EMP table. Sort the output based on DEPTNO (highest to
lowest) and then by SAL (highest to lowest)
33.Display the name of employees along with their annual salary (SAL*12). The name of
the employee earning highest annual salary should appear first
34.Display ENAME, SAL, HRA, PF, DA, total salary for each employee. The output should
be in the order of total salary (HRA 15% of SAL, DA 10% of SAL, PF 5% of SAL and Total
Salary will be (SAL + HRA + DA) PF
35.Display EMPNO, ENAME, SAL, and DEPTNO from EMP table. Output should be in the
order of length of ename(high to low), if length of ename is same for more employees
then sort the output by salary(high to low) and if more employees has same salary
than sort the output by ename
36.Write a query to display ename from EMP table. MILLER to be displayed in first row and
rest in ascending order

Class 2: Querying Multiple Tables


Here we will discuss the below topics

Understanding Joins
Querying with Inner Joins
Querying with Outer Joins
Querying with Cross Joins and Self Joins

Understanding Joins:
SQL join is instruction to a database to combine data from more than one table. There are
different kinds of joins, which have different rules for the results they create.
Let's look at the different kinds of SQL joins:
INNER JOIN:
An inner join produces a result set that is limited to the rows where there is a match in
both tables for what we're looking for. If you don't know which kind of join you need, this
will usually be your best bet.
Example:
SELECT gid, first_name, last_name, pid, gardener_id, plant_name
FROM Gardners INNER JOIN Plantings ON gid = gardener_id

LEFT OUTER JOIN

A left outer join, or left join, results in a set where all of the rows from the first, or left hand
side, table are preserved. The rows from the second or right hand side table only show up
if they have a match with the rows from the first table. Where there are values from the
left table but not from the right, the table will read null, which means that the value has
not been set.
Example:
SELECT gid, first_name, last_name, pid, gardener_id, plant_name
FROM Gardners LEFT OUTER JOIN Plantings ON gid = gardener_id

Right Outer Join:


A right outer join, or right join, is the same as a left join, except the roles are reversed. All
of the rows from the right hand side table show up in the result, but the rows from the
table on the left are only there if they match the table on the right. Empty spaces are null,
just like with the the left join.
Example:
SELECT gid, first_name, last_name, pid, gardener_id, plant_name
FROM Gardners RIGHT OUTER JOIN Plantings ON gid = gardener_id

FULL OUTER JOIN


A full outer join, or just outer join, produces a result set with all of the rows of both tables,
regardless of whether there are any matches. Similarly to the left and right joins, we call
the empty spaces null.
Example
SELECT gid, first_name, last_name, pid, gardener_id, plant_name
FROM Gardners FULL OUTER JOIN Plantings ON gid = gardener_id

Cross Join:
The cross join returns a table with a potentially very large number of rows. The row count
of the result is equal to the number of rows in the first table times the number of rows in
the second table. Each row is a combination of the rows of the first and second table.
Example:
SELECT gid, first_name, last_name, pid, gardener_id, plant_name
FROM Gardners CROSS JOIN Plantings

SELF JOIN
You can join a single table to itself. In this case, you are using the same table twice.
Example:
SELECT G1.gid, G1.first_name, G1.last_name, G2.gid, G2.first_name, G2.last_name
FROM Gardners G1 INNER JOIN Gardners G2 ON G1.first_name = G2.first_name

Exercise:
1.
Display all employees with their department names
2. Display ename who are working in sales department
3. Display ENAME, DNAME, SAL and COMM for employees with salary between 2000 to
5000 and location is Chicago
4. Display those employees whose salary is greater than his managers salary
5. Display those employees who are working in the same dept where his manager is work
6. Display those employees who are not working under any Manager
7. Display ENAME, GRADE (deptno 10 or 30) (grade is not 4) (joined company before 31DEC-82)
8. Delete employees joined company before 31-Dec-82 while their Location is New York or
Chicago?
9. Display employee name ,job,deptname,loc for all who are working as manager?
10.Display those employees whose manager name is JONES and also display their
manager name?
11.Display employee names who are working in ACCOUNTING department
12.Display the employee names who are working in CHICAGO
13.Display name and salary of FORD if his salary is equal to hisal of his grade?
14.Display employees whose salary is less than his manager but more than salary of other
managers?
15.Display those employees whose manager name is Jones
16.Display the details of those employees who do not have any person working under him
17.Display the details of those employees who are in sales department and grade is 3
18.Display those department where no employee working?
19.Display ename, job and his manager. Display also employees who are without
managers?
20.Find out the number of employees whose salary is greater than their managers salary?
21.Display ename, job, dname, his manager name, his grade and display output
department number wise?
22.List ename, job, sal, grade and dname for everyone in a company except 'CLERK'. Sort
on salary display the highest salary first?
23.Display ENAME, Manager Name for employees who has EMPNO as odd number; Display
ENAME, Managers Manager Name for all the employees who has EMPNO as even
number. If Managers Manager is not present display Manager Name and display
employee name if no manager is present for that employee. Output should consist of
two columns: 1-ENAME, 2-BOSS

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