Looks like we've loaded some snowflake tables via ELT with "TO, FROM" as column names and they are both classic functions in any sql tool
Whenever I run a query for specifically those columns, there's always an error - how do I fix it apart from changing column names? Don't want to change column names as ELT process always happens from mongoDB via log based replication (stitch data)
select * - works perfectly , all other columns work too. Just "to" , "from" is the issue - should that never be used a columns?
select to, from from table limit 10 ; // tested [to, "to", 'to'] - none work
Error: SQL compilation error: error line 1 at position 7 invalid identifier '"to"'
Any ideas how to fix this apart from source column change or snowflake column changes?
Snowflake uses the standard double quotes to escape identifiers. However, when identifiers are escaped, the case of the letters matters, So, these are not the same:
select "to"
select "To"
select "TO"
You need to choose the one that is correct for your column names.
In addition spaces matter, so these are not the same:
select "to "
select " to"
select "to"
That is, what looks like to might be something else. You need to know what that is to escape the name properly.
If you can't figure them out, there is a trick to create a view to give the table reasonable names. Something like this:
create view v_t (to_date, from_date, . . .) as
select *
from t;
You need to be sure to include all the column names in the table in the column name list, in the same order as they are in the table. Then you can use the view with reasonable names.
Related
I have a table named Posts I would like to count and profile in Snowflake using the current Snowsight UI.
When I return the results via EXPLAIN using TABLULAR I am able to return the set with the combination of TABLE, RESULT_SCAN, and LAST_QUERY_ID functions, but any predicate or filter or column reference seems to fail.
Is there a valid way to do this in Snowflake with the TABLE function or is there another way to query the output of the EXPLAIN using TABLULAR?
-- Works
EXPLAIN using TABULAR SELECT COUNT(*) from Posts;
-- Works
SELECT t.* FROM TABLE(RESULT_SCAN(LAST_QUERY_ID())) as t;
-- Does not work
SELECT t.* FROM TABLE(RESULT_SCAN(LAST_QUERY_ID())) as t where operation = 'GlobalStats';
-- invalid identifier 'OPERATION', the column does not seem recognized.
Tried the third example and expected the predicate to apply to the function output. I don't understand why the filter works on some TABLE() results and not others.
You need to double quote the column name
where "operation"=
From the Documentation
Note that because the output column names from the DESC USER command
were generated in lowercase, the commands use delimited identifier
notation (double quotes) around the column names in the query to
ensure that the column names in the query match the column names in
the output that was scanned
I have a script in ASP Classic that uses a Firebird database. I would like to execute a query without "quotation marks"
Now I must write this:
SQL = "SELECT ""TArticoli"".""IDArticolo"",""TArticoli"".""Desc"" FROM ""TArticoli"";"
I would write this:
SQL = "SELECT TArticles.IDArticle, TArticles.Desc FROM TArticles;"
The first one is accepted the second not, how can I do this?
You can't. DESC is a reserved word in Firebird, so to be able to use it as a column name (or any other object name for that matter), you will need to enclose it in quotes.
A second problem is that you are currently using
SELECT "TArticoli"."IDArticolo","TArticoli"."Desc" FROM "TArticoli"
And this means both your table name and the column names are case sensitive, and in that case, quoting those object names is mandatory. Unquoted object names are case insensitive, but are mapped to object names in upper case. This means that select * from TArticoli will select from a table called TARTICOLI, while select * from "TArticoli", selects from a table called TArticoli.
So unless you are going to rename or recreate all your tables or columns, you will not be able to get rid of quotes. The only thing you can do to reduce the number of quotes, is by not prefixing the columns with the table names (in the query shown it isn't necessary), or otherwise use a case insensitive alias for the table, eg
SELECT "IDArticolo", "Desc" FROM "TArticoli"
or
SELECT a."IDArticolo", a."Desc" FROM "TArticoli" AS a
I want to append new rows to a table-1 d:\dl based on the equality constraint lower(rdl.subdir) = lower(tr.n1), where rdl and tr would be prospective aliases for f:\rdl and f:\tr tables respectively.
I get a function name is missing ). message when running the following command in VFP9:
INSERT INTO d:\dl SELECT * FROM f:\rdl WHERE (select LOWER(subdir)FROM f:\rdl in (select LOWER(n1) FROM f:\tr))
I am using the in syntax, instead of the alias based equality statement lower(rdl.subdir) = lower(tr.n1) because I do not know where to define aliases within this command.
In general, the best way to get something like this working is to first make the query work and give you the results you want, and then use it in INSERT.
In general, in SQL commands you assign aliases by putting them after the table name, with or without the keyword AS. In this case, you don't need aliases because the ones you want are the same as the table names and that's the default.
If what you're showing is your exact code and you're running it in VFP, the first problem is that you're missing the continuation character between lines.
You're definitely doing too much work, too. Try this:
INSERT INTO d:\dl ;
SELECT * ;
FROM f:\rdl ;
JOIN f:\tr ;
ON LOWER(rdl.subdir) = LOWER(tr.n1)
I need to find the '&' in a string.
SELECT * FROM TABLE WHERE FIELD LIKE ..&...
Things we have tried :
SELECT * FROM TABLE WHERE FIELD LIKE '&&&'
SELECT * FROM TABLE WHERE FIELD LIKE '&\&&'
SELECT * FROM TABLE WHERE FIELD LIKE '&|&&' escape '|'
SELECT * FROM TABLE WHERE FIELD LIKE '&[&]&'
None of these give any results in SQLServer.
Well some give all rows, some give none.
Similar questions that didn't work or were not specific enough.
Find the % character in a LIKE query
How to detect if a string contains special characters?
some old reference Server 2000
http://web.archive.org/web/20150519072547/http://sqlserver2000.databases.aspfaq.com:80/how-do-i-search-for-special-characters-e-g-in-sql-server.html
& isn't a wildcard in SQL, therefore no escaping is needed.
Use % around the value your looking for.
SELECT * FROM TABLE WHERE FIELD LIKE '%&%'
Your statement contains no wildcards, thus is equivalent to WHERE FIELD = '&'.
& isn't a special character in SQL so it doesn't need to be escaped. Just write
WHERE FIELD LIKE '%&%'
to search for entries that contain & somewhere in the field
Be aware though, that this will result in a full table scan as the server can't use any indexes. Had you typed WHERE FIELD LIKE '&%' the server could do a range seek to find all entries starting with &.
If you have a lot of data and can't add any more constraints, you should consider using SQL Server's full-text search to create and use and FTS index, with predicates like CONTAINS or FREETEXT
I found problem when trying to retrieve specific name column that using syntax/statement/command using sql.
Example I have table 'dcparam' with name some column 'SELECT', 'INSERT', 'UPDATE' in database sqlserver.
Then I trying to select using query:
SELECT SELECT,INSERT,UPDATE FROM dcparam
Well it could be solve using "*" in select, but then how if i wish only specific column.
Regard.
Add square brackets around the column name.
SELECT [SELECT], [INSERT], [UPDATE] FROM dcparam
It's probably best to reconsider your column names in the long run however...