Chapter 5
More SQL:
Complex
Queries,
Triggers,
Views, and
Schema
Modification
Copyright © 2011 Pearson Education, Inc. Publishing as Pearson Addison-Wesley
Outline
More Complex SQL Retrieval Queries
Specifying Constraints as Assertions and
Action Triggers
Views (Virtual Tables) in SQL
Schema Change Statements in SQL
Copyright © 2011 Ramez Elmasri and Shamkant Navathe
More Complex SQL Retrieval
Queries
Additional features allow users to specify
more complex retrievals from database:
Nested queries, joined tables, outer joins,
aggregate functions, and grouping
Copyright © 2011 Ramez Elmasri and Shamkant Navathe
Comparisons Involving NULL
and Three-Valued Logic
Meanings of NULL
Unknown value
Unavailable or withheld value
Not applicable attribute
Each individual NULL value considered to
be different from every other NULL value
SQL uses a three-valued logic:
TRUE, FALSE, and UNKNOWN
Copyright © 2011 Ramez Elmasri and Shamkant Navathe
Comparisons Involving NULL
and Three-Valued Logic (cont’d.)
Copyright © 2011 Ramez Elmasri and Shamkant Navathe
Comparisons Involving NULL
and Three-Valued Logic (cont’d.)
SQL allows queries that check whether an
attribute value is NULL
IS or IS NOT NULL
Copyright © 2011 Ramez Elmasri and Shamkant Navathe
Nested Queries, Tuples,
and Set/Multiset Comparisons
Nested queries
Complete select-from-where blocks within
WHERE clause of another query
Outer query
Comparison operator IN
Compares value v with a set (or multiset) of
values V
Evaluates to TRUE if v is one of the elements in
V
Copyright © 2011 Ramez Elmasri and Shamkant Navathe
Nested Queries (cont’d.)
Copyright © 2011 Ramez Elmasri and Shamkant Navathe
Nested Queries (cont’d.)
Use tuples of values in comparisons
Place them within parentheses
Copyright © 2011 Ramez Elmasri and Shamkant Navathe
Nested Queries (cont’d.)
Use other comparison operators to
compare a single value v
= ANY (or = SOME) operator
• Returns TRUE if the value v is equal to some value
in the set V and is hence equivalent to IN
Other operators that can be combined with ANY
(or SOME): >, >=, <, <=, and <>
Copyright © 2011 Ramez Elmasri and Shamkant Navathe
Nested Queries (cont’d.)
Avoid potential errors and ambiguities
Create tuple variables (aliases) for all tables
referenced in SQL query
Copyright © 2011 Ramez Elmasri and Shamkant Navathe
Copyright © 2011 Ramez Elmasri and Shamkant Navathe
Correlated Nested Queries
Correlated nested query
Evaluated once for each tuple in the outer
query
Copyright © 2011 Ramez Elmasri and Shamkant Navathe
The EXISTS and UNIQUE
Functions in SQL
EXISTS function
Check whether the result of a correlated
nested query is empty or not
EXISTS and NOT EXISTS
Typically used in conjunction with a correlated
nested query
SQL function UNIQUE(Q)
Returns TRUE if there are no duplicate tuple’s
in the result of query Q
Copyright © 2011 Ramez Elmasri and Shamkant Navathe
EXISTS
Used to check if sub-query returns any rows
Ex. List the names of managers who have at least one
dependent.
Select Fname, Lname
From Employee
Where EXISTS (Select *
From Dependent
Where Ssn = Essn)
AND
EXISTS (Select *
From Department
Where Ssn = Mgr_ssn);
15
Copyright © 2011 Ramez Elmasri and Shamkant Navathe
Explicit Sets and Renaming of
Attributes in SQL
Can use explicit set of values in WHERE
clause
Use qualifier AS followed by desired new
name
Rename any attribute that appears in the result
of a query
Copyright © 2011 Ramez Elmasri and Shamkant Navathe
Joined Tables in SQL and Outer
Joins
Joined table
Permits users to specify a table resulting from
a join operation in the FROM clause of a query
The FROM clause in Q1A
Contains a single joined table
Copyright © 2011 Ramez Elmasri and Shamkant Navathe
Joined Tables in SQL and Outer
Joins (cont’d.)
Specify different types of join
NATURAL JOIN
Various types of OUTER JOIN
NATURAL JOIN on two relations R and S
No join condition specified
Implicit EQUIJOIN condition for each pair of
attributes with same name from R and S
Copyright © 2011 Ramez Elmasri and Shamkant Navathe
Joined Tables in SQL and Outer
Joins (cont’d.)
Inner join
Default type of join in a joined table
Tuple is included in the result only if a matching
tuple exists in the other relation
LEFT OUTER JOIN
Every tuple in left table must appear in result
If no matching tuple
• Padded with NULL values for attributes of right table
Copyright © 2011 Ramez Elmasri and Shamkant Navathe
Joined Tables in SQL and Outer
Joins (cont’d.)
RIGHT OUTER JOIN
Every tuple in right table must appear in result
If no matching tuple
• Padded with NULL values for the attributes of left
table
FULL OUTER JOIN
Can nest join specifications
Copyright © 2011 Ramez Elmasri and Shamkant Navathe
Aggregate Functions in SQL
Used to summarize information from
multiple tuples into a single-tuple summary
Grouping
Create subgroups of tuples before
summarizing
Built-in aggregate functions
COUNT, SUM, MAX, MIN, and AVG
Functions can be used in the SELECT
clause or in a HAVING clause
Copyright © 2011 Ramez Elmasri and Shamkant Navathe
Aggregate Functions in SQL
(cont’d.)
NULL values discarded when aggregate
functions are applied to a particular column
Copyright © 2011 Ramez Elmasri and Shamkant Navathe
Grouping: The GROUP BY and
HAVING Clauses
Partition relation into subsets of tuples
Based on grouping attribute(s)
Apply function to each such group
independently
GROUP BY clause
Specifies grouping attributes
If NULLs exist in grouping attribute
Separate group created for all tuples with a
NULL value in grouping attribute
Copyright © 2011 Ramez Elmasri and Shamkant Navathe
Grouping: The GROUP BY and
HAVING Clauses (cont’d.)
HAVING clause
Provides a condition on the summary
information
Copyright © 2011 Ramez Elmasri and Shamkant Navathe
Discussion and Summary of SQL
Queries
Copyright © 2011 Ramez Elmasri and Shamkant Navathe
Specifying Constraints as
Assertions and Actions Triggers
CREATE ASSERTION
Specify additional types of constraints outside
scope of built-in relational model constraints
CREATE TRIGGER
Specify automatic actions that database
system will perform when certain events and
conditions occur
Copyright © 2011 Ramez Elmasri and Shamkant Navathe
Specifying General Constraints
as Assertions in SQL
CREATE ASSERTION
Specify a query that selects any tuples that
violate the desired condition
Use only in cases where it is not possible to
use CHECK on attributes and domains
Copyright © 2011 Ramez Elmasri and Shamkant Navathe
Introduction to Triggers in SQL
CREATE TRIGGER statement
Used to monitor the database
Typical trigger has three components:
Event(s)
Condition
Action
Copyright © 2011 Ramez Elmasri and Shamkant Navathe
Views (Virtual Tables) in SQL
Concept of a view in SQL
Single table derived from other tables
Considered to be a virtual table
Copyright © 2011 Ramez Elmasri and Shamkant Navathe
Specification of Views in SQL
CREATE VIEW command
Give table name, list of attribute names, and a
query to specify the contents of the view
Copyright © 2011 Ramez Elmasri and Shamkant Navathe
Specification of Views in SQL
(cont’d.)
Specify SQL queries on a view
View always up-to-date
Responsibility of the DBMS and not the user
DROP VIEW command
Dispose of a view
Copyright © 2011 Ramez Elmasri and Shamkant Navathe
View Implementation, View
Update, and Inline Views
Complex problem of efficiently
implementing a view for querying
Query modification approach
Modify view query into a query on underlying
base tables
Disadvantage: inefficient for views defined via
complex queries that are time-consuming to
execute
Copyright © 2011 Ramez Elmasri and Shamkant Navathe
View Implementation
View materialization approach
Physically create a temporary view table when
the view is first queried
Keep that table on the assumption that other
queries on the view will follow
Requires efficient strategy for automatically
updating the view table when the base tables
are updated
Copyright © 2011 Ramez Elmasri and Shamkant Navathe
View Implementation (cont’d.)
Incremental update strategies
DBMS determines what new tuples must be
inserted, deleted, or modified in a materialized
view table
Copyright © 2011 Ramez Elmasri and Shamkant Navathe
View Update and Inline Views
Update on a view defined on a single table
without any aggregate functions
Can be mapped to an update on underlying
base table
View involving joins
Often not possible for DBMS to determine
which of the updates is intended
Copyright © 2011 Ramez Elmasri and Shamkant Navathe
View Update and Inline Views
(cont’d.)
Clause WITH CHECK OPTION
Must be added at the end of the view definition
if a view is to be updated
In-line view
Defined in the FROM clause of an SQL query
Copyright © 2011 Ramez Elmasri and Shamkant Navathe
Schema Change Statements in
SQL
Schema evolution commands
Can be done while the database is operational
Does not require recompilation of the database
schema
Copyright © 2011 Ramez Elmasri and Shamkant Navathe
The DROP Command
DROP command
Used to drop named schema elements, such
as tables, domains, or constraint
Drop behavior options:
CASCADE and RESTRICT
Example:
DROP SCHEMA COMPANY CASCADE;
Copyright © 2011 Ramez Elmasri and Shamkant Navathe
The ALTER Command
Alter table actions include:
Adding or dropping a column (attribute)
Changing a column definition
Adding or dropping table constraints
Example:
ALTER TABLE COMPANY.EMPLOYEE ADD
COLUMN Job VARCHAR(12);
To drop a column
Choose either CASCADE or RESTRICT
Copyright © 2011 Ramez Elmasri and Shamkant Navathe
The ALTER Command (cont’d.)
Change constraints specified on a table
Add or drop a named constraint
Copyright © 2011 Ramez Elmasri and Shamkant Navathe
Summary
Complex SQL:
Nested queries, joined tables, outer joins,
aggregate functions, grouping
CREATE ASSERTION and CREATE
TRIGGER
Views
Virtual or derived tables
Copyright © 2011 Ramez Elmasri and Shamkant Navathe