Select name from system table and select from this table - sql

I need dynamically obtain table name from system table and perform a select query on this table example:
SELECT "schema"+'.'+"table" FROM SVV_TABLE_INFO WHERE "table" LIKE '%blabla%'
it returns my_schema.the_main_blabla_table
And after I get this table name I need to perform :
SELECT * FROM my_schema.the_main_blabla_table LIMIT 100
Is it possible to in a single query?

If you are talking about select subquery after "from" i can say that you can do this.
You will get something like this:
SELECT * FROM
(
SELECT "schema"+'.'+"table" FROM SVV_TABLE_INFO WHERE "table" LIKE '%blabla%'
)
LIMIT 100
Unfortunately, i can't test it on yor data, but i very interested in result because i have never done something like this. If i get your question incorrect, tell me pls.

Amazon Redshift does not support the ability to take the output of a query and use it as part of another query.
Your application will need to query Redshift to obtain the relevant table name(s), then make another call to Redshift to query that table.

Related

Query just runs, doesn't execute

my query just runs and doesnt execute, what is wrong. work on oracle sql developer, company server
CREATE TABLE voice2020 AS
SELECT
to_char(SDATE , 'YYYYMM') as month,
MSISDN,
SUM(CH_MONEY_SUBS_DED)/100 AS AIRTIME_VOICE,
SUM(CALLDURATION/60) AS MIN_USAGE,
sum(DUR_ONNET_OOB/60) as DUR_ONNET_OOB,
sum(DUR_ONNET_IB/60) as DUR_ONNET_IB,
sum(DUR_ONNET_FREE/60) as DUR_ONNET_FREE,
sum(DUR_OFFNET_OOB/60) as DUR_OFFNET_OOB,
sum(DUR_OFFNET_IB/60) as DUR_OFFNET_IB,
sum(DUR_OFFNET_FREE/60) as DUR_OFFNET_FREE,
SUM(case when sdate < to_date('20190301','YYYYMMDD')
then CH_MONEY_PAID_DED-nvl(CH_MONEY_SUBS_DED,0)-REV_VOICE_INT-REV_VOICE_ROAM_OUTGOING-REV_VOICE_ROAM_Incoming
else (CH_MONEY_OOB-REV_VOICE_INT-REV_VOICE_ROAM_OUTGOING-REV_VOICE_ROAM_Incoming) end)/100 AS VOICE_OOB_SPEND
FROM CCN.CCN_VOICE_MSISDN_MM#xdr1
where MSISDN IN ( SELECT MSISDN FROM saayma_a.BASE30112020) --change date
GROUP BY
MSISDN,
to_char(SDATE , 'YYYYMM')
;
This is a performance issue. Clearly the query driving your CREATE TABLE statement is taking too long to return a result set.
You are querying from a table in a remote database (CCN.CCN_VOICE_MSISDN_MM#xdr1) and then filtering against a local table (saayma_a.BASE30112020) . This means you are going to copy all of that remote table across the network, then discard the records which don't match the WHERE clause.
You know your data (or at least you should know it): does that sound efficient? If you're actually discarding most of the records you should try to filter CCN_VOICE_MSIDN_MM in the remote database.
If you need more advice you need to provide more information. Please read this post about asking Oracle tuning questions on this site, then edit your question to include some details.
You are executing CTAS (CREATE TABLE AS SELECT) and the purpose of this query is to create the table with data which is generated via this query.
If you want to just execute the query and see the data then remove first line of your query.
-- CREATE TABLE voice2020 AS
SELECT
.....
Also, the data of your actual query must be present in the voice2020 table if you have already executed it once.
Select * from voice2020;
Looks like you are trying to copying the data from one table to another table, Can you once create the table if it's not created and then try this statement.
insert into target_table select * from source_table;

Redshift - Use results of query to dynamically use in a UNION [duplicate]

Is it possible in any way (without scripting) to aggregate columns which are stored in a table cell.
Basically what i am trying to achieve here is that if i have the following table
Table 1
KEYNAME | COLUMN_NAME
COUNT_USER | USER_ID
SUM_HOURS | HOURS_WATCHED
Can i do something like
select SUM((select column_name from TABLE1 where KEYNAME = "SUM_HOURS")) FROM MAIN_TABLE
I have the option to script in python via which i know how to achieve this. But i am curious to know if this is possible in any version of SQL or not
Please let me know if the information is insufficient.
No, you cannot use a column name that comes from the result of another query.
You would need to do this in your own code, sending the result to Amazon Redshift as a complete query. (That is, run one query to obtain the column names, then run a second query with those column names inserted.)

Fastest way to check if any case of a pattern exist in a column using SQL

I am trying to write code that allows me to check if there are any cases of a particular pattern inside a table.
The way I am currently doing is with something like
select count(*)
from database.table
where column like (some pattern)
and seeing if the count is greater than 0.
I am curious to see if there is any way I can speed up this process as this type of pattern finding happens in a loop in my query and all I need to know is if there is even one such case rather than the total number of cases.
Any suggestions will be appreciated.
EDIT: I am running this inside a Teradata stored procedure for the purpose of data quality validation.
Using EXISTS will be faster if you don't actually need to know how many matches there are. Something like this would work:
IF EXISTS (
SELECT *
FROM bigTbl
WHERE label LIKE '%test%'
)
SELECT 'match'
ELSE
SELECT 'no match'
This is faster because once it finds a single match it can return a result.
If you don't need the actual count, the most efficient way in Teradata will use EXISTS:
select 1
where exists
( select *
from database.table
where column like (some pattern)
)
This will return an empty result set if the pattern doesn't exist.
In terms of performance, a better approach is to:
select the result set based on your pattern;
limit the result set's size to 1.
Check whether a result was returned.
Doing this prevents the database engine from having to do a full table scan, and the query will return as soon as the first matching record is encountered.
The actual query depends on the database you're using. In MySQL, it would look something like:
SELECT id FROM database.table WHERE column LIKE '%some pattern%' LIMIT 1;
In Oracle it would look like this:
SELECT id FROM database.table WHERE column LIKE '%some pattern%' AND ROWNUM = 1;

Inserting a new column into SQL

I have these queries:
SELECT *
FROM dbo.GRAUD_ProjectsByCostCategory
select right(CostCategoryId,14) as CostBreak
from dbo.GRAUD_ProjectsByCostCategory
They work well in that they give me the correct data, but I would like to know how to combine the new column CostBreak into the table of results rather than as a separate query result.
An example of the results I get are as below:
Where I want them in the same table
The data is coming from the same table so you should be able to just add that value to your initial query. You do not even have to perform a join to get it:
SELECT name,
description,
project,
CostCategoryId,
right(CostCategoryId,14) as CostBreak
FROM dbo.GRAUD_ProjectsByCostCategory

How to Unselect The Field in select Query using sql

hi in my database i am store more than 50 field with primarykey (Auto increment) i am not sure about the fields name but i wants to select the entire data in that table , i am using
SELECT * FROM tablename
i want to select all the fields except that ID but this query populate the entire table so is there is possible to unselect the particular field in the select query. Can anyone have an idea please guide me. Thanks in Advance
The * indicates that you want to select ALL fields from a given table. If you want to select only a few fields, or all but one, then you will need to specify the ones you want manually:
select field1,field2,field3 from tablename
The SQL standard does not offer an "except" notation. It would be neat if we could
select t.* -t.ID
from some_table t
/
but it is not supported.
On the other hand, SELECT * is a dangerous construct. It is always better to explicitly list the columns we want in any given situation.