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IS 257 – Fall 2005 2005.10.19 SLIDE 1
More on SQL (and MySQL)
University of California, Berkeley
School of Information Management and Systems
SIMS 257: Database Management
IS 257 – Fall 2005 2005.10.19 SLIDE 2
Lecture Outline
• Review– ColdFusion– PHP
• More on ORACLE SQL and SQL-Plus
• MySQL
IS 257 – Fall 2005 2005.10.19 SLIDE 3
Web Application Server Software
• ColdFusion
• PHP
• ASP
• All of the are server-side scripting languages that embed code in HTML pages
IS 257 – Fall 2005 2005.10.19 SLIDE 4
ColdFusion
• Developing WWW sites typically involved a lot of programming to build dynamic sites– e.g. Pages generated as a result of catalog
searches, etc.
• ColdFusion was designed to permit the construction of dynamic web sites with only minor extensions to HTML through a DBMS interface
IS 257 – Fall 2005 2005.10.19 SLIDE 5
What ColdFusion is Good for
• Putting up databases onto the Web
• Handling dynamic databases (Frequent updates, etc)
• Making databases searchable and updateable by users.
IS 257 – Fall 2005 2005.10.19 SLIDE 6
Templates
• Assume we have a database named contents_of_my_shopping_cart.mdb -- single table called contents...
• Create an HTML page (uses extension .cfm), before <HEAD>...
• <CFQUERY NAME= ”cart" DATASOURCE=“contents_of_my_shopping_cart"> SELECT * FROM contents ; </CFQUERY>
IS 257 – Fall 2005 2005.10.19 SLIDE 7
Templates cont.
• <HEAD>• <TITLE>Contents of My Shopping Cart</TITLE>• </HEAD>• <BODY>• <H1>Contents of My Shopping Cart</H1>• <CFOUTPUT QUERY= ”cart">• <B>#Item#</B> <BR>• #Date_of_item# <BR>• $#Price# <P>• </CFOUTPUT>• </BODY>• </HTML>
IS 257 – Fall 2005 2005.10.19 SLIDE 8
Templates cont.
Contents of My Shopping Cart
Bouncy Ball with Psychedelic Markings 12 December 1998 $0.25
Shiny Blue Widget 14 December 1998 $2.53
Large Orange Widget 14 December 1998 $3.75
IS 257 – Fall 2005 2005.10.19 SLIDE 9
PHP
• PHP is an Open Source Software project with many programmers working on the code.– Commonly paired with MySQL, another OSS
project– Free– Both Windows and Unix support
• Estimated that more than 250,000 web sites use PHP as an Apache Module.
IS 257 – Fall 2005 2005.10.19 SLIDE 10
PHP Syntax
• Similar to ASP
• Includes most programming structures (Loops, functions, Arrays, etc.)
• Loads HTML form variables so that they are addressable by name
<HTML><BODY>
<?php
$myvar = “Hello World”;
echo $myvar ;
?>
</BODY></HTML>
IS 257 – Fall 2005 2005.10.19 SLIDE 11
Combined with MySQL
• DBMS interface appears as a set of functions:
<HTML><BODY><?php$db = mysql_connect(“localhost”, “root”);mysql_select_db(“mydb”,$db);$result = mysql_query(“SELECT * FROM employees”, $db);Printf(“First Name: %s <br>\n”, mysql_result($result, 0 “first”);Printf(“Last Name: %s <br>\n”, mysql_result($result, 0 “last”);?></BODY></HTML>
IS 257 – Fall 2005 2005.10.19 SLIDE 12
SELECT
• Syntax:– SELECT [DISTINCT] attr1, attr2,…, attr3 as
label, function(xxx), calculation, attr5, attr6 FROM relname1 r1, relname2 r2,… rel3 r3 WHERE condition1 {AND | OR} condition2 ORDER BY attr1 [DESC], attr3 [DESC]
IS 257 – Fall 2005 2005.10.19 SLIDE 13
CREATE SYNONYM
• CREATE SYNONYM newname FOR oldname;
• CREATE SYNONYM BIOLIFE for ray.BIOLIFE;
IS 257 – Fall 2005 2005.10.19 SLIDE 14
SELECT Conditions
• = equal to a particular value• >= greater than or equal to a particular value• > greater than a particular value• <= less than or equal to a particular value• <> not equal to a particular value• LIKE ‘%wom_n%’ (Note different wild card)• IN (‘opt1’, ‘opt2’,…,’optn’)
IS 257 – Fall 2005 2005.10.19 SLIDE 15
Aggregate Functions
• COUNT(dataitem)• AVG(numbercolumn)• SUM(numbercolumn)• MAX(numbercolumn)• MIN(numbercolumn)• STDDEV(numbercolumn)• VARIANCE(numbercolumn)
IS 257 – Fall 2005 2005.10.19 SLIDE 16
Numeric Functions
• ABS(n)• ACOS(n)• ASIN(n)• ATAN(n)• ATAN2(n, m)• CEIL(n)• COS(n)• COSH(n)
• ROUND(n)• SIGN(n)• SIN(n)• SINH(n)• SQRT(n)• TAN(n)• TANH(n)• TRUNC(n[,
m])
• EXP(n)• EXP(n)• FLOOR(n)• LN(n)• LOG(m,n)• MOD(n)• POWER(m,n)
IS 257 – Fall 2005 2005.10.19 SLIDE 17
Character Functions returning character values
• CHR(n)• CONCAT(char1,char2)• INITCAP(char)• LOWER(char)• LPAD(char, n,char2),
RPAD(char, n,char2)• LTRIM(char, n, cset),
RTRIM(char, n, cset)
• REPLACE(char, srch, repl)
• SOUNDEX(char)• SUBSTR(char, m, n)• SUBSTRB(char, m, n)• TRANSLATE(char,
from, to)• UPPER(char)
IS 257 – Fall 2005 2005.10.19 SLIDE 18
Character Function returning numeric values
• ASCII(char)• INSTR(char1,
char2[,m, n])• INSTRB(char1,
char2[,m, n])• LENGTH(char)• LENGTHB(char)
IS 257 – Fall 2005 2005.10.19 SLIDE 19
Date functions
• ADD_MONTHS(dt, n)• LAST_DAY(d)• MONTHS_BETWEEN(d1, d2)• NEW_TIME(d, z1, z2) -- PST, AST, etc. • NEXT_DAY(d, dayname)• ROUND(d, fmt) -- century, year etc.• SYSDATE• TRUNC(d, fmt) -- century, year, etc.
IS 257 – Fall 2005 2005.10.19 SLIDE 20
Conversion Functions
• CHARTOROWID(char)• CONVERT(char, dchar,
schar)• HEXTORAW(char)• RAWTOHEX(raw)• ROWIDTOCHAR(rowid)• TO_CHAR (date, fmt)• TO_DATE(char, fmt)
• TO_NUMBER(char,fmt)
• TO_MULTIBYTE(char)• TO_SINGLE_BYTE(ch
ar)
IS 257 – Fall 2005 2005.10.19 SLIDE 21
Create Table
• CREATE TABLE table-name (attr1 attr-type CONSTRAINT constr1 PRIMARY KEY, attr2 attr-type CONSTRAINT constr2 NOT NULL,…, attrM attr-type CONSTRAINT constr3 REFERENCES owner.tablename(attrname) ON DELETE CASCADE, attrN attr-type CONSTRAINT constrN CHECK (attrN = UPPER(attrN)), attrO attr-type DEFAULT default_value);
• Adds a new table with the specified attributes (and types) to the database.– NOTE that the “CONSTRAINT and name parts are
optional)
IS 257 – Fall 2005 2005.10.19 SLIDE 22
Create Table
• CREATE TABLE table-name ( attr1 attr-type PRIMARY KEY, attr2 attr-type NOT NULL,…, attrM attr-type REFERENCES
owner.tablename(attrname) ON DELETE CASCADE,
attrN attr-type CHECK (attrN = UPPER(attrN)
attrO attr-type DEFAULT default_value);– Without “CONSTRAINT” and name parts
IS 257 – Fall 2005 2005.10.19 SLIDE 23
Types
• VARCHAR2(size)• NUMBER(p, s)• LONG -- long char data• DATE -- from 4712BC to 4714 AD• RAW(size) -- binary• LONG RAW -- large binary• ROWID -- row reference• CHAR(size) -- fixed length characters
IS 257 – Fall 2005 2005.10.19 SLIDE 24
Alter Table
• ALTER TABLE table-name ADD attr1 attr-type;• ALTER TABLE table-name ADD attr1
CONSTRAINT xxx constrainvalue;• ALTER TABLE table-name MODIFY attr1
optiontochange;• ALTER TABLE table-name DROP COLUMN
attr1;• Adds, drops or modifies a column in an existing
database table.– Note: constrainvalue is any column constraint like
‘PRIMARY KEY’, REFERENCES, etc.
IS 257 – Fall 2005 2005.10.19 SLIDE 25
INSERT
• INSERT INTO table-name (attr1, attr4, attr5,…, attrK) VALUES (“val1”, val4, val5,…, “valK”);
• OR
• INSERT INTO table-name SELECT col1, col2, col3 as newcol2, col4 FROM xx, yy WHERE where-clause;
• Adds a new row(s) to a table.
IS 257 – Fall 2005 2005.10.19 SLIDE 26
DELETE
• DELETE FROM table-name WHERE <where clause>;
• Removes rows from a table.
IS 257 – Fall 2005 2005.10.19 SLIDE 27
UPDATE
• UPDATE tablename SET attr1=newval, attr2 = newval2 WHERE <where clause>;
• changes values in existing rows in a table (those that match the WHERE clause).
IS 257 – Fall 2005 2005.10.19 SLIDE 28
DROP Table
• DROP TABLE tablename;
• Removes a table from the database.
IS 257 – Fall 2005 2005.10.19 SLIDE 29
CREATE INDEX
• CREATE [ UNIQUE ] INDEX indexname ON tablename (attr1 [ASC|DESC][, attr2 [ASC|DESC], ...])
• Adds an index on the specified attributes to a table
IS 257 – Fall 2005 2005.10.19 SLIDE 30
System Information In ORACLE
• Find all of the tables for a user– SELECT * FROM ALL_CATALOG WHERE
OWNER = ‘userid’;– SELECT * FROM USER_CATALOG; (or CAT)
• Show the attributes and types of data for a particular table in SQLPlus– DESCRIBE tablename;
IS 257 – Fall 2005 2005.10.19 SLIDE 31
Running commands
• Create file with SQL and SQLPlus commands in it.– Use a plain text editor and NOT a word
processor (or save as text only)
• Give the file the extension .sql
• From inside SQLPlus type – START filename
IS 257 – Fall 2005 2005.10.19 SLIDE 32
Simple formatting in SQLPlus
• SET PAGESIZE 500
• SET LINESIZE 79
• PROMPT stuff to put out to screen
• TTITLE “title to put at top of results pages”
• COLUMN col_name HEADING “New Name”
IS 257 – Fall 2005 2005.10.19 SLIDE 33
Outputting results as a file…
• SPOOL filename
• Commands – everything that you see is copied to the file
until…
• SPOOL STOP– File will be created with everything between
the SPOOL commands
IS 257 – Fall 2005 2005.10.19 SLIDE 34
Lecture Outline
• Review– ColdFusion– PHP
• More on ORACLE SQL and SQL-Plus
• MySQL
IS 257 – Fall 2005 2005.10.19 SLIDE 35
MySQL
• The tag-line at http://www.mysql.com is– The world's most popular open source database
• It is true, it is the most widely used open source database system with users and uses that range from individuals to major corporations and includes…– Evite– Friend Finder Network– Friendster– Google (not for search though )– PriceGrabber.com– Ticketmaster– Yahoo!– The US Census bureau– and many, many others
IS 257 – Fall 2005 2005.10.19 SLIDE 36
MySQL myths
• The MySQL.com web site contains a list of common myths and misconceptions about MySQL and refutes them:– MYTH: MySQL is a new, untested database
management system – MYTH: MySQL doesn’t support transactions like other
proprietary database engines (it is supposed to be in the version we use here)
– MYTH: MySQL is only for small, departmental, or web-based applications
– MYTH: MySQL doesn’t offer enterprise-class features – MYTH: MySQL doesn’t have the type of support large
corporations need – MYTH: MySQL isn’t open source any more