Selecting observations in range of numbers between set of other numbers - sql

There is a character variable in the dataset that reads as '2-6' or '4-7'.
What I am interested in selecting those observations where the numbers 3,4,5 may be in that spectrum '4-7'
it is easy enough to use the statement
where 3 between TO_NUMBER(REGEXP_SUBSTR(MEAS_VALUE,'\d+',1,1)) and TO_NUMBER(substr(REGEXP_SUBSTR(MEAS_VALUE,'(-)\d+',1,1),2)) or
4 between TO_NUMBER(REGEXP_SUBSTR(MEAS_VALUE,'\d+',1,1)) and TO_NUMBER(substr(REGEXP_SUBSTR(MEAS_VALUE,'(-)\d+',1,1),2)) or
5 between TO_NUMBER(REGEXP_SUBSTR(MEAS_VALUE,'\d+',1,1)) and TO_NUMBER(substr(REGEXP_SUBSTR(MEAS_VALUE,'(-)\d+',1,1),2))
Just looking to see if there is a more..eloquent solution as to group that range together in a function-
test data below
TIA-
with test (id, MEAS_VALUE) as (
select 1,'2-5' from dual union all --want this
select 2,'1-2' from dual union all --do not want this
select 3,'5-7' from dual) ----want this
select * from test
where 3 between TO_NUMBER(REGEXP_SUBSTR(MEAS_VALUE,'\d+',1,1)) and TO_NUMBER(substr(REGEXP_SUBSTR(MEAS_VALUE,'(-)\d+',1,1),2))
or 4 between TO_NUMBER(REGEXP_SUBSTR(MEAS_VALUE,'\d+',1,1)) and TO_NUMBER(substr(REGEXP_SUBSTR(MEAS_VALUE,'(-)\d+',1,1),2)) or
5 between TO_NUMBER(REGEXP_SUBSTR(MEAS_VALUE,'\d+',1,1)) and TO_NUMBER(substr(REGEXP_SUBSTR(MEAS_VALUE,'(-)\d+',1,1),2));

Use a subquery:
select t.*
from (select t.*,
TO_NUMBER(REGEXP_SUBSTR(MEAS_VALUE, '\d+', 1, 1)) as lo,
TO_NUMBER(REGEXP_SUBSTR(MEAS_VALUE, '\d+', 1, 2)) as lhi
from test t
) t
where 3 between lo and hi and
4 between lo and hi and
5 between lo and hi;
You can further simplify the condition to:
where least(3, 4, 5) >= lo and
greatest(3, 4, 5) <= hi

Related

how to get the number after '-' in Oracle

I have some strings in my table. They are like 1101-1, 1101-2, 1101-10, 1101-11 pulse, shock, abc, 1104-2, 1104-11, 2201-1, 2202-4. I tried to sort them like below:
1101-1
1101-2
1101-10
1101-11
1104-2
1104-11
2201-1
2202-4
abc
pulse
shock
But I can't get the sort correctly. Below is my codes:
select column from table
order by regexp_substr(column, '^\D*') nulls first,
to_number(substr(regexp_substr(column, '\d+'),1,4)) asc
Sort numbers as numbers:
first the ones in front of the hyphen (line #16)
then the ones after it (line #17),
then the rest (line #18)
Mind the to_number function! Without it, you'll be sorting strings! and get the wrong result.
SQL> with test (col) as
2 ( select '1101-1' from dual union all
3 select '1101-2' from dual union all
4 select '1101-10' from dual union all
5 select '1101-11' from dual union all
6 select 'pulse' from dual union all
7 select 'shock' from dual union all
8 select 'abc' from dual union all
9 select '1104-2' from dual union all
10 select '1104-11' from dual union all
11 select '2201-1' from dual union all
12 select '2202-4' from dual
13 )
14 select col
15 from test
16 order by to_number(regexp_substr(col, '^\d+')),
17 to_number(regexp_substr(col, '\d+$')),
18 col;
COL
-------
1101-1
1101-2
1101-10
1101-11
1104-2
1104-11
2201-1
2202-4
abc
pulse
shock
11 rows selected.
SQL>
For your examples, this should do:
order by regexp_substr(column, '^[^-]+'), -- everything before the hyphen
len(column),
column
To get the number after '-' specifically:
with ttt (col) as (
select cast(column_value as varchar2(10)) as second_str
from table(sys.dbms_debug_vc2coll
( '1101-1'
, '1101-2'
, '1101-10'
, '1101-11'
, '1104-2'
, '1104-11'
, '2201-1'
, '2202-4'
, 'abc'
, 'pulse'
, 'shock'
))
)
select col
, regexp_substr(col, '(^\d+-)(\d+)', 1, 1, '', 2)
from ttt;
COL SECOND_STR
---------- ----------
1101-1 1
2201-1 1
1101-10 10
1101-11 11
1104-11 11
1101-2 2
1104-2 2
2202-4 4
abc
pulse
shock
11 rows selected
This treats the text string as two values, (^\d+-) followed by (\d+), and takes the second substring (the final '2' parameter). As only positional parameters are allowed for built-in SQL functions, you also have to specify occurrence (1) and match param (null, as we don't care about case etc).

How can I get a natural numeric sort order in Oracle?

I have a column with a letter followed by either numbers or letters:
ID_Col
------
S001
S1001
S090
SV911
SV800
Sfoofo
Szap
Sbart
How can I order it naturally with the numbers first (ASC) then the letters alphabetically? If it starts with S and the remaining characters are numbers, sort by the numbers. Else, sort by the letter. So SV911should be sorted at the end with the letters since it also contains a V. E.g.
ID_Col
------
S001
S090
S1001
Sbart
Sfoofo
SV800
SV911
Szap
I see this solution uses regex combined with the TO_NUMBER function, but since I also have entries with no numbers this doesn't seem to work for me. I tried the expression:
ORDER BY
TO_NUMBER(REGEXP_SUBSTR(ID_Col, '^S\d+$')),
ID_Col
/* gives ORA-01722: invalid number */
Would this help?
SQL> with test (col) as
2 (select 'S001' from dual union all
3 select 'S1001' from dual union all
4 select 'S090' from dual union all
5 select 'SV911' from dual union all
6 select 'SV800' from dual union all
7 select 'Sfoofo' from dual union all
8 select 'Szap' from dual union all
9 select 'Sbart' from dual
10 )
11 select col
12 from test
13 order by substr(col, 1, 1),
14 case when regexp_like(col, '^[[:alpha:]]\d') then to_number(regexp_substr(col, '\d+$')) end,
15 substr(col, 2);
COL
------
S001
S090
S1001
Sbart
Sfoofo
SV800
SV911
Szap
8 rows selected.
SQL>

Sort a value list that contains letters and also numbers in a specific order

I have a problem in SQL Oracle, I'm trying to create a view that contains values with letters and numbers and I want to sort them in a specific order.
Here is my query:
create or replace view table1_val (val, msg_text) as
select
val, msg_text
from
table_val
where
val in ('L1','L2','L3','L4','L5','L6','L7','L8','L9','L10','L11','L12','L13','L14','G1','G2','G3','G4')
order by lpad(val, 3);
The values are displayed like this:
G1,G2,G3,G4,L1,L2,L3,L4,L5,L6,L7,L8,L9,L10,L11,L12,L13
The thing is that I want to display the L values first and then the G values like in the where condition. The 'val' column is VARCHAR2(3 CHAR). The msg_text column is irrelevant. Can someone help me with that? I use Oracle 12C.
You must interpret the second part of the val column as a number
order by
case when val like 'L%' then 0 else 1 end,
to_number(substr(val,2))
This work fine for your current data, but may fail in future if a new record is added with non-numeric structure.
More conservative (and more hard to write), but safe would be to used a decode for all the current keys, ordering unknown keys on the last position (id = 18 in the example):
order by
decode(
'L1',1,
'L2',2,
'L3',3,
'L4',4,
'L5',5,
'L6',6,
'L7',7,
'L8',8,
'L9',9,
'L10',10,
'L11',11,
'L12',12,
'L13',13,
'G1',14,
'G2',15,
'G3',16,
'G4',17,18)
You can't do anything based on the order of the WHERE condition
But you can use a CASE on the ORDER BY
ORDER BY CASE
WHEN SUBSTR(val, 1, 1) = 'L' THEN 1
WHEN SUBSTR(val, 1, 1) = 'G' THEN 2
ELSE 3
END,
TO_NUMBER (SUBSTR(val, 2, 10));
Another option to consider might be using regular expressions, such as
SQL> with table1_val (val) as
2 (select 'L1' from dual union all
3 select 'L26' from dual union all
4 select 'L3' from dual union all
5 select 'L21' from dual union all
6 select 'L11' from dual union all
7 select 'L4' from dual union all
8 select 'G88' from dual union all
9 select 'G10' from dual union all
10 select 'G2' from dual
11 )
12 select val
13 from table1_val
14 order by regexp_substr(val, '^[[:alpha:]]+') desc,
15 to_number(regexp_substr(val, '\d+$'));
VAL
---
L1
L3
L4
L11
L21
L26
G2
G10
G88
9 rows selected.
SQL>

Random data sampling with oracle sql, data generation

i need to generate some sample data from a population. I want to do this with an SQL query on an Oracle 11g database.
Here is a simple working example with population size 4 and sample size 2:
with population as (
select 1 as val from dual union all
select 2 from dual union all
select 3 from dual union all
select 4 from dual)
select val from (
select val, dbms_random.value(0,10) AS RANDORDER
from population
order by randorder)
where rownum <= 2
(the oracle sample() funtion didn't work in connection with the WITH-clause for me)
But now I, I want to "upscale" or multiply my sample data. So that I can get something like 150 % sample data of the population data (population size 4 and sample size 6, e.g.)
Is there a good way to achieve this with an SQL query?
You could use CONNECT BY:
with population(val, RANDOMORDER) as (
select level, dbms_random.value(0,10) AS RANDORDER
from dual
connect by level <= 6
ORDER BY RANDORDER
)
select val
FROM population
WHERE rownum <= 4;
db<>fiddle demo
The solution depends, if you want all rows from first initial set(s) and random additional rows from last one then use:
with params(size_, sample_) as (select 4, 6 from dual)
select val
from (
select mod(level - 1, size_) + 1 val, sample_,
case when level <= size_ * floor(sample_ / size_) then 0
else dbms_random.value()
end rand
from params
connect by level <= size_ * ceil(sample_ / size_)
order by rand)
where rownum <= sample_
But if you allow possibility of result like (1, 1, 2, 2, 3, 3), where some values may not appear at all in output (here 4) then use this:
with params(size_, sample_) as (select 4, 6 from dual)
select val
from (
select mod(level - 1, size_) + 1 val, sample_, dbms_random.value() rand
from params
connect by level <= size_ * ceil(sample_ / size_)
order by rand)
where rownum <= sample_
How it works? We build set of (1, 2, 3, 4) as many times as it results from division sample / size. Then we assign random values. In first case I assign 0 to first set(s), so they will be in output for sure, and random values to last set. In second case randoms are assigned to all rows.

SQL to generate a list of numbers from 1 to 100

Using the DUAL table, how can I get a list of numbers from 1 to 100?
Your question is difficult to understand, but if you want to select the numbers from 1 to 100, then this should do the trick:
Select Rownum r
From dual
Connect By Rownum <= 100
Another interesting solution in ORACLE PL/SQL:
SELECT LEVEL n
FROM DUAL
CONNECT BY LEVEL <= 100;
Using Oracle's sub query factory clause: "WITH", you can select numbers from 1 to 100:
WITH t(n) AS (
SELECT 1 from dual
UNION ALL
SELECT n+1 FROM t WHERE n < 100
)
SELECT * FROM t;
Do it the hard way. Use the awesome MODEL clause:
SELECT V
FROM DUAL
MODEL DIMENSION BY (0 R)
MEASURES (0 V)
RULES ITERATE (100) (
V[ITERATION_NUMBER] = ITERATION_NUMBER + 1
)
ORDER BY 1
Proof: http://sqlfiddle.com/#!4/d41d8/20837
You could use XMLTABLE:
SELECT rownum
FROM XMLTABLE('1 to 100');
-- alternatively(useful for generating range i.e. 10-20)
SELECT (COLUMN_VALUE).GETNUMBERVAL() AS NUM
FROM XMLTABLE('1 to 100');
DBFiddle Demo
If you want your integers to be bound between two integers (i.e. start with something other than 1), you can use something like this:
with bnd as (select 4 lo, 9 hi from dual)
select (select lo from bnd) - 1 + level r
from dual
connect by level <= (select hi-lo from bnd);
It gives:
4
5
6
7
8
Peter's answer is my favourite, too.
If you are looking for more details there is a quite good overview, IMO, here.
Especially interesting is to read the benchmarks.
Using GROUP BY CUBE:
SELECT ROWNUM
FROM (SELECT 1 AS c FROM dual GROUP BY CUBE(1,1,1,1,1,1,1) ) sub
WHERE ROWNUM <=100;
Rextester Demo
A variant of Peter's example, that demonstrates a way this could be used to generate all numbers between 0 and 99.
with digits as (
select mod(rownum,10) as num
from dual
connect by rownum <= 10
)
select a.num*10+b.num as num
from digits a
,digits b
order by num
;
Something like this becomes useful when you are doing batch identifier assignment, and looking for the items that have not yet been assigned.
For example, if you are selling bingo tickets, you may want to assign batches of 100 floor staff (guess how i used to fund raise for sports). As they sell a batch, they are given the next batch in sequence. However, people purchasing the tickets can select to purchase any tickets from the batch. The question may be asked, "what tickets have been sold".
In this case, we only have a partial, random, list of tickets that were returned within the given batch, and require a complete list of all possibilities to determine which we don't have.
with range as (
select mod(rownum,100) as num
from dual
connect by rownum <= 100
),
AllPossible as (
select a.num*100+b.num as TicketNum
from batches a
,range b
order by num
)
select TicketNum as TicketsSold
from AllPossible
where AllPossible.Ticket not in (select TicketNum from TicketsReturned)
;
Excuse the use of key words, I changed some variable names from a real world example.
... To demonstrate why something like this would be useful
I created an Oracle function that returns a table of numbers
CREATE OR REPLACE FUNCTION [schema].FN_TABLE_NUMBERS(
NUMINI INTEGER,
NUMFIN INTEGER,
EXPONENCIAL INTEGER DEFAULT 0
) RETURN TBL_NUMBERS
IS
NUMEROS TBL_NUMBERS;
INDICE NUMBER;
BEGIN
NUMEROS := TBL_NUMBERS();
FOR I IN (
WITH TABLA AS (SELECT NUMINI, NUMFIN FROM DUAL)
SELECT NUMINI NUM FROM TABLA UNION ALL
SELECT
(SELECT NUMINI FROM TABLA) + (LEVEL*TO_NUMBER('1E'||TO_CHAR(EXPONENCIAL))) NUM
FROM DUAL
CONNECT BY
(LEVEL*TO_NUMBER('1E'||TO_CHAR(EXPONENCIAL))) <= (SELECT NUMFIN-NUMINI FROM TABLA)
) LOOP
NUMEROS.EXTEND;
INDICE := NUMEROS.COUNT;
NUMEROS(INDICE):= i.NUM;
END LOOP;
RETURN NUMEROS;
EXCEPTION
WHEN NO_DATA_FOUND THEN
RETURN NUMEROS;
WHEN OTHERS THEN
RETURN NUMEROS;
END;
/
Is necessary create a new data type:
CREATE OR REPLACE TYPE [schema]."TBL_NUMBERS" IS TABLE OF NUMBER;
/
Usage:
SELECT COLUMN_VALUE NUM FROM TABLE([schema].FN_TABLE_NUMBERS(1,10))--integers difference: 1;2;.......;10
And if you need decimals between numbers by exponencial notation:
SELECT COLUMN_VALUE NUM FROM TABLE([schema].FN_TABLE_NUMBERS(1,10,-1));--with 0.1 difference: 1;1.1;1.2;.......;10
SELECT COLUMN_VALUE NUM FROM TABLE([schema].FN_TABLE_NUMBERS(1,10,-2));--with 0.01 difference: 1;1.01;1.02;.......;10
If you want to generate the list of numbers 1 - 100 you can use the cartesian product of {1,2,3,4,5,6,6,7,8,9,10} X {0,10,20,30,40,50,60,70,80,90}
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cartesian_product
Something along the lines of the following:
SELECT
ones.num + tens.num
FROM
(
SELECT 1 num UNION ALL
SELECT 2 num UNION ALL
SELECT 3 num UNION ALL
SELECT 4 num UNION ALL
SELECT 5 num UNION ALL
SELECT 6 num UNION ALL
SELECT 7 num UNION ALL
SELECT 9 num UNION ALL
SELECT 10 num
) as ones
CROSS JOIN
(
SELECT 0 num UNION ALL
SELECT 10 num UNION ALL
SELECT 20 num UNION ALL
SELECT 30 num UNION ALL
SELECT 40 num UNION ALL
SELECT 50 num UNION ALL
SELECT 60 num UNION ALL
SELECT 70 num UNION ALL
SELECT 80 num UNION ALL
SELECT 90 num
) as tens;
I'm not able to test this out on an oracle database, you can place the dual where it belongs but it should work.
SELECT * FROM `DUAL` WHERE id>0 AND id<101
The above query is written in SQL in the database.