- · Orders the rows in ascending order (the default order); A-Z ASC [Ascending]
- · Orders the rows in descending order: Z-A DESC [ Descending]
- · To arrange according to class, kind, or size-Sorting
1. In the example
below, assign the employee_id column the alias of “Number.” Complete the SQL
statement to order the result set by the column alias.
SELECT employee_id, first_name, last_name
FROM employees;
SELECT employee_id as "Number", first_name, last_name
FROM employees
ORDER BY "Number";
2. Create a query
that will return all the DJs on Demand CD titles ordered by year with titles in
alphabetical order by year.
SELECT title
FROM d_cds
ORDER BY year, title;
3. Order the DJs on
Demand songs by descending title. Use the alias “Our Collection” for the song
title.
SELECT title as "Our Collection"
FROM d_cds
ORDER BY title DESC;
4. Write a SQL
statement using the ORDER BY clause that could retrieve the information needed.
Do not run the query.
Create a list of students who are in their first year of school. Include
the first name, last name, student ID number, and parking place number. Sort
the results alphabetically by student last name and then by first name. If more
than one student has the same last name, sort each first name in Z to A order.
All other results should be in alphabetical order (A to Z).
SELECT first_name, last_name, student_id , parking_number
FROM students
WHERE year = 1
ORDER BY last_name , first_name DESC;
5. Write a SQL
statement using the employees table and the ORDER BY clause that could retrieve
the information in the following table. Return only those employees with
employee_id<125.
DEPARTMENT_ID
|
LAST_NAME
|
MANAGER_ID
|
90
|
Kochhar
|
100
|
90
|
King
|
-
|
90
|
De Haan
|
100
|
60
|
Lorentz
|
103
|
60
|
Hunold
|
102
|
60
|
Ernst
|
103
|
50
|
Mourgos
|
100
|
SELECT department_id ,
last_name, manager_id
FROM employees
WHERE employee_id<125
ORDER BY department_id DESC , last_name DESC;
1. Limiting values
with the WHERE clause is an example of:
a. Projection
b. Ordering
c. Joining
d. Grouping
e. Selection
e
2. You want to sort
your CD collection by title, and then by artist. This can be accomplished
using:
a. WHERE
b. SELECT
c. ORDER BY
d. DISTINCT
c
3. Which of the
following are SQL keywords?
a. SELECT
b. ALIAS
c. COLUMN – it’s a
reserved word
d. FROM
a and d
4. Which of the
following are true?
a. Multiplication and division take
priority over addition.
b. Operators of the same priority are
evaluated from left to right.
c. Parentheses can be used to override
the rules of precedence.
d. None of the above are true.
a, b, c
5. The following
query was written:
SELECT DISTINCT last_name
FROM students
a. To select all the outstanding students
b. To choose last names that are duplicates
c. To select last names without
duplicates
d. To select all last names
c
6. The following
string was created using which SELECT clause?
Abby Rogers is an order taker for Global Fast Foods
a. SELECT first_name ||' ' ||last_name ||' is an ' staff_type ' for Global
Fast Foods'
b. SELECT Abby Rogers is an ||staff_type||' for Global Fast Foods'
c. SELECT first_name,last_name '||staff_type||' for Global Fast Foods'
d. SELECT first_name ||' ' ||last_name
||' is an '||staff_type||' for Global Fast Foods'
d
7. Which of the
following SELECT clauses will return uppercase column headings?
a. SELECT id, last_name, address, city, state, zip,
phone_number;
b. SELECT ID, LAST_NAME, ADDRESS, CITY, STATE, ZIP,
PHONE_NUMBER;
c. SELECT Id, Last_name, Address, City, State, Zip,
Phone_number;
d. SELECT id AS ID, last_name AS NAME, address AS ADDRESS, city
AS CITY, state AS STATE, zip AS ZIP, phone_number AS PHONE_NUMBER;
ALL
8. Which SELECT
clause will return the last names in alphabetical order?
a. SELECT last_name AS ALPHABETICAL - OK
b. SELECT last_name AS ORDER BY -
space is alias order by so it required “”
c. SELECT last_name -OK
d. SELECT ASC last_name – no column preset with name asc, so it fails
a and c
9. Which SELECT clause will return a column
heading for employee_id called “New Employ-ees”?
a. SELECT last_name AS "New Employees"
b. SELECT employee_id AS New Employees
c. SELECT employee AS "New Employees"
d. SELECT employee_id AS "New
Employees"
d
10. Examine the
following query:
SELECT last_name, job_id, salary
FROM employees
WHERE job_id = 'SA_REP' OR job_id = 'AD_PRES' AND salary >15000;
Which results could not have been returned from this query?
a. Joe Everyone, sales representative, salary 15000
b. Jane Hendricks, sales manager, salary 15500
c. Arnie Smithers, administration president, 20000
d. Jordan Lim, sales representative, salary 14000
WHERE job_id
= 'SA_REP' OR (job_id = 'AD_PRES' AND salary >15000);
I don’t see job_id
as 'SA_REP' / 'AD_PRES' in any record above
none
But if I consider full forms as obvious, and ignore small
errors in representation of choices:
Possible options: a,
c and d
11. Finish this query
so it returns all employees whose last names start with “St”.
SELECT last_name
FROM employees
WHERE last_name LIKE 'St%';
12. What salary values
will not be returned from this query?
SELECT last_name, first_name, salary
FROM employees
WHERE salary BETWEEN 1900 AND 2100;
Above 2100 , below 1900
13. Correct each WHERE
clause:
a. WHERE department_id NOT IN 101,102,103;
b. WHERE last_name = King
c. WHERE start date LIKE "05-May-1998"
d. WHERE salary IS BETWEEN 5000 AND 7000
e. WHERE id =! 10
a. ERE department_id NOT IN (101,102,103)
b. WHERE last_name = 'King'
c. WHERE start_date = '05-May-1998'
d. remove IS
e. WHERE id != 10
14. SELECT prefix
FROM phone
WHERE prefix BETWEEN 360 AND 425
OR prefix IN (206,253,625)
AND prefix BETWEEN 315 AND 620;
Which of the following values could be returned?
625, 902, 410, 499
Read as: [BETWEEN, IN >AND>OR]
WHERE prefix
(BETWEEN 360 AND 425)
OR (prefix IN (206,253,625)
AND (prefix BETWEEN 315 AND 620));
·
625
cancelled by BETWEEN
·
902
out of the world
·
410 supported by BETWEEN
OR
·
499 supported by BETWEEN
but negated by IN
410
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