The multi-part identifier could not be bound - SET clause - sql

I've searched for this answer, but most seem to come from the table being updated rather than the table having the information being taken from.
The first B.DED1 in the SET is the one throwing the multi-part identifier. Yet the one in the WHERE clause works just fine.
UPDATE #output
SET col1 = B.DED1
SELECT *
FROM #output A
INNER JOIN TableName B
ON A.Key = B.Key
WHERE B.DED1 = 'col1'

UPDATE A
SET col1 = B.DED1
FROM [#output] A
INNER JOIN TableName B
ON A.Key = B.Key
WHERE B.DED1 = 'col1'

Change your query as following:
UPDATE O SET col1 = B.DED1
FROM [#output] O
INNER JOIN TableName B
ON O.Key = B.Key
WHERE B.DED1 = 'col1'

Related

Getting error when doing an update query using joins [duplicate]

This question already has answers here:
How to do an update sql query using a sub select query?
(2 answers)
Closed last year.
UPDATE A
SET foo = 'bar',
car = 'bmw'
FROM TableA A
JOIN TableB B
ON A.col1 = B.colx
AND A.STATUS = B.STATUS
WHERE A.nbr = '1234'
and A.STATUS IN (K,Y)
and A.FILE_TYPE = 'R'
I am trying to use the update function above but I keep getting the error it is not properly ended when I try to run it. Can someone tell me where the syntax error is?
.
In the Oracle database, when updating a table from another table, it's often easier to use the MERGE statement.
MERGE INTO TableA A
USING TableB B ON (
A.col1 = B.colx
AND A.STATUS = B.STATUS
AND A.nbr = 1234
AND A.STATUS IN (K,Y)
AND A.FILE_TYPE = 'R'
)
WHEN MATCHED THEN UPDATE
SET foo = 'bar'
, car = 'bmw';
In Oracle you can not update a join query. You may only update a table (and im some cases a view or a subquery).
Fortunately you can simple rewrite your update without the join by passing the condition in the where clause.
update TableA a
set foo = 'bar',
car = 'bmw'
WHERE a.nbr = '1234'
and a.STATUS IN ('K','Y')
and a.FILE_TYPE = 'R'
and (col1, status) in (select colx,status from tableB);
This is the simplest solution for you problem as described.
Note if you realy needs a join, e.g. if you need to update the columns of the tableA with the columns of the tableB such as
UPDATE A
SET a.foo = b.foo,
a.car = b.car
....
You may use in Oracle an updatable join view as follows
update (
select a.*, b.foo new_foo, b.car new_car
FROM TableA A
JOIN TableB B
ON A.col1 = B.colx
AND A.STATUS = B.STATUS
WHERE A.nbr = '1234'
and A.STATUS IN ('K','Y')
and A.FILE_TYPE = 'R'
)
set foo = new_foo,
car = new_car
Note that the join query is enclosed in parenthesis to get the rigth syntax.
Note also that the tableB must have a primary key (or unique index) on the columns colx,status to be able to update. Otherwise you get exception ORA-01779: cannot modify a column which maps to a non key-preserved table

SQL copy values of column a of table A into column b of table B

I need to copy the values of column a of table A into column b of Table B.
Is this statement correct?
UPDATE
TableA,
TableB
SET
TableB.b = TableA.a
WHERE
TableA.Id = TableB.Id
If the column of the destination is empty and you do not need to match something just use this
INSERT INTO DestinationTb ([ColumnName])
SELECT [ColumnNameToTransfer] FROM [SourceTable]
if not just with a join
update A
SET A.Columnname = B.ColumnNameToTransfer
from DestinationTb A
INNER JOIN
SourceTable B
ON
--HERE ADD YOUR MATCHING FOR EXAMPLE
A.ID = B.ID;
or with a subquery
UPDATE DestinationTb
SET ColumnName = (
SELECT ColumnNameToTransfer
FROM SourceTable
--HERE ADD YOUR MATCHING FOR EXAMPLE
WHERE SourceTable.id = DestinationTb.id
);
One solution is to use FROM and JOIN behind UPDATE
UPDATE A
SET A.a= B.b
FROM TableA A
JOIN TableB B ON A.ID = B.ID

MSSQL - Compound WHERE clause after INNER JOIN?

I have this query:
select *
from table1 d inner join table2 s on d.SOME_ID = s.SOME_ID
where s.col1 = 'THIS' AND s.col2 = 'THAT'
Which is returning the same as this:
select *
from table1 d inner join table2 s on d.SOME_ID = s.SOME_ID
where s.col1 = 'THIS'
That is, it seems to be ignoring the second part of the WHERE.
If I run this:
select *
from table2 s
where s.col1 = 'THIS' AND s.col2 = 'THAT'
Everything works fine, and the result is filtered by both qualifications.
Am I missing something with this join thing?
EDIT:
Both tables have the 'col2', and the value is same for both (by coincidence). Interestingly, this works:
select *
from table1 d inner join table2 s on d.SOME_ID = s.SOME_ID
where s.col1 = 'THIS' AND d.col2 = 'THAT'
It returns the single row which satisfies both qualifiers. Does this help anyone figure out what is going on?
EDIT2:
This is a shot in the dark. Since both tables contain the 'col2' column, does the join discard the table2.col2 column to produce the join? So when I filter the resulting join by a qualification on a column which is not included in the new table, they all pass?

update Informix table with joins

Is this the correct syntax for an Informix update?
update table1
set table1.code = 100
from table1 a, table2 b, table3 c
where a.key = c.key
a.no = b.no
a.key = c.key
a.code = 10
b.tor = 'THE'
a.group = 4183
a.no in ('1111','1331','1345')
I get the generic -201 'A syntax error has occurred' message, but I can't see what's wrong.
Unfortunately, the accepted answer causes syntax error in Informix Dynamic Server Version 11.50.
This is the only way to avoid syntax error:
update table1
set code = (
select 100
from table2 b, table3 c
where table1.key = c.key
and table1.no = b.no
and table1.key = c.key
and table1.code = 10
and b.tor = 'THE'
and table1.group = 4183
and table1.no in ('1111','1331','1345')
)
BTW, to get Informix version, run the following SQL:
select first 1 dbinfo("version", "full") from systables;
Updated: also see this answer.
Updated: also see the docs.
your syntax error is table1.code
set table1.code = 100
change this into
set a.code = 100
Full code
update table1
set a.code = 100
from table1 a, table2 b, table3 c
where a.key = c.key
and a.no = b.no
and a.key = c.key
and a.code = 10
and b.tor = 'THE'
and a.group = 4183
and a.no in ('1111','1331','1345')
The original SQL in the question was:
update table1
set table1.code = 100
from table1 a, table2 b, table3 c
where a.key = c.key
a.no = b.no
a.key = c.key
a.code = 10
b.tor = 'THE'
a.group = 4183
a.no in ('1111','1331','1345')
This is unconditionally missing a series of AND keywords. The accepted solution also identifies a problem in the SET clause with the use of table1 instead of its alias a. That might be material; I can't test it (see discussion below). So, assuming that the join UPDATE is accepted at all, the corrected SQL should read:
UPDATE table1
SET a.code = 100
FROM table1 a, table2 b, table3 c
WHERE a.key = c.key
AND a.no = b.no
AND a.key = c.key
AND a.code = 10
AND b.tor = 'THE'
AND a.group = 4183
AND a.no IN ('1111','1331','1345')
This is the same as the (syntax-corrected) accepted answer. However, I'm curious to know which version of Informix you are using that accepts the FROM syntax (maybe XPS?). I'm using IDS 11.70.FC2 (3 fix packs behind the current 11.70.FC5 version) on Mac OS X 10.7.4, and I can't get the UPDATE with FROM syntax to work. Further the manual at the IBM's Informix 11.70 Information Center for UPDATE does not mention it. I'm not sure whether it would make any difference if you're using ODBC or JDBC; it shouldn't, but I'm using ESQL/C, which sends the SQL unchanged to the server.
The notation I tried is (+ is the prompt):
+ BEGIN;
+ CREATE TABLE a(a INTEGER NOT NULL, x CHAR(10) NOT NULL, y DATE NOT NULL);
+ INSERT INTO a(a, x, y) VALUES(1, 'obsoletely', '2012-04-01');
+ INSERT INTO a(a, x, y) VALUES(2, 'absolutely', '2012-06-01');
+ CREATE TABLE b(b INTEGER NOT NULL, p CHAR(10) NOT NULL, q DATE NOT NULL);
+ INSERT INTO b(b, p, q) VALUES(3, 'daemonic', '2012-07-01');
+ SELECT * FROM a;
1|obsoletely|2012-04-01
2|absolutely|2012-06-01
+ SELECT * FROM b;
3|daemonic|2012-07-01
+ SELECT *
FROM a, b
WHERE a.a < b.b
AND b.p MATCHES '*a*e*';
1|obsoletely|2012-04-01|3|daemonic|2012-07-01
2|absolutely|2012-06-01|3|daemonic|2012-07-01
+ UPDATE a
SET x = 'crumpet'
FROM a, b
WHERE a.a < b.b
AND b.p MATCHES '*a*e*';
SQL -201: A syntax error has occurred.
SQLSTATE: 42000 at <<temp>>:23
+ SELECT * FROM a;
1|obsoletely|2012-04-01
2|absolutely|2012-06-01
+ ROLLBACK;
It depends on the version you are using. If you are using at least 11.50 the best solution would be:
MERGE INTO table1 as t1
USING table2 as t2
ON t1.ID = t2.ID
WHEN MATCHED THEN UPDATE set (t1.col1, t1.col2) = (t2.col1, t2.col2);
The UPDATE - SET - FROM - Syntax was removed in versions greater than 11.50.
If you are using an earlier version you can go with
UPDATE t SET a = t2.a FROM t, t2 WHERE t.b = t2.b;
For Informix SE 7.25...
UPDATE ... FROM ... syntax does not exist
You also "Cannot modify table or view used in subquery"
which is given when using Rockallite's answer
Another solution would be to break it down into two queries:
First, get the ROWIDs for the required records (filtered on multiple tables):
SELECT a.ROWID
FROM table1 a, table2 b, table3 c
WHERE a.key = c.key
AND a.no = b.no
AND a.key = c.key
AND a.code = 10
AND b.tor = 'THE'
AND a.group = 4183
AND a.no IN ('1111','1331','1345')
Put the result into a comma separated string.
Then, update only those records for the main table where the ROWID was found in the first query:
UPDATE table1 a
SET a.code = 100
WHERE a.ROWID in ([comma separated ROWIDs found above])

How do I UPDATE from a SELECT in SQL Server?

In SQL Server, it is possible to insert rows into a table with an INSERT.. SELECT statement:
INSERT INTO Table (col1, col2, col3)
SELECT col1, col2, col3
FROM other_table
WHERE sql = 'cool'
Is it also possible to update a table with SELECT? I have a temporary table containing the values and would like to update another table using those values. Perhaps something like this:
UPDATE Table SET col1, col2
SELECT col1, col2
FROM other_table
WHERE sql = 'cool'
WHERE Table.id = other_table.id
UPDATE
Table_A
SET
Table_A.col1 = Table_B.col1,
Table_A.col2 = Table_B.col2
FROM
Some_Table AS Table_A
INNER JOIN Other_Table AS Table_B
ON Table_A.id = Table_B.id
WHERE
Table_A.col3 = 'cool'
In SQL Server 2008 (or newer), use MERGE
MERGE INTO YourTable T
USING other_table S
ON T.id = S.id
AND S.tsql = 'cool'
WHEN MATCHED THEN
UPDATE
SET col1 = S.col1,
col2 = S.col2;
Alternatively:
MERGE INTO YourTable T
USING (
SELECT id, col1, col2
FROM other_table
WHERE tsql = 'cool'
) S
ON T.id = S.id
WHEN MATCHED THEN
UPDATE
SET col1 = S.col1,
col2 = S.col2;
UPDATE YourTable
SET Col1 = OtherTable.Col1,
Col2 = OtherTable.Col2
FROM (
SELECT ID, Col1, Col2
FROM other_table) AS OtherTable
WHERE
OtherTable.ID = YourTable.ID
I'd modify Robin's excellent answer to the following:
UPDATE Table
SET Table.col1 = other_table.col1,
Table.col2 = other_table.col2
FROM
Table
INNER JOIN other_table ON Table.id = other_table.id
WHERE
Table.col1 != other_table.col1
OR Table.col2 != other_table.col2
OR (
other_table.col1 IS NOT NULL
AND Table.col1 IS NULL
)
OR (
other_table.col2 IS NOT NULL
AND Table.col2 IS NULL
)
Without a WHERE clause, you'll affect even rows that don't need to be affected, which could (possibly) cause index recalculation or fire triggers that really shouldn't have been fired.
One way
UPDATE t
SET t.col1 = o.col1,
t.col2 = o.col2
FROM
other_table o
JOIN
t ON t.id = o.id
WHERE
o.sql = 'cool'
Another possibility not mentioned yet is to just chuck the SELECT statement itself into a CTE and then update the CTE.
WITH CTE
AS (SELECT T1.Col1,
T2.Col1 AS _Col1,
T1.Col2,
T2.Col2 AS _Col2
FROM T1
JOIN T2
ON T1.id = T2.id
/*Where clause added to exclude rows that are the same in both tables
Handles NULL values correctly*/
WHERE EXISTS(SELECT T1.Col1,
T1.Col2
EXCEPT
SELECT T2.Col1,
T2.Col2))
UPDATE CTE
SET Col1 = _Col1,
Col2 = _Col2;
This has the benefit that it is easy to run the SELECT statement on its own first to sanity check the results, but it does requires you to alias the columns as above if they are named the same in source and target tables.
This also has the same limitation as the proprietary UPDATE ... FROM syntax shown in four of the other answers. If the source table is on the many side of a one-to-many join then it is undeterministic which of the possible matching joined records will be used in the Update (an issue that MERGE avoids by raising an error if there is an attempt to update the same row more than once).
For the record (and others searching like I was), you can do it in MySQL like this:
UPDATE first_table, second_table
SET first_table.color = second_table.color
WHERE first_table.id = second_table.foreign_id
Using alias:
UPDATE t
SET t.col1 = o.col1
FROM table1 AS t
INNER JOIN
table2 AS o
ON t.id = o.id
The simple way to do it is:
UPDATE
table_to_update,
table_info
SET
table_to_update.col1 = table_info.col1,
table_to_update.col2 = table_info.col2
WHERE
table_to_update.ID = table_info.ID
This may be a niche reason to perform an update (for example, mainly used in a procedure), or may be obvious to others, but it should also be stated that you can perform an update-select statement without using join (in case the tables you're updating between have no common field).
update
Table
set
Table.example = a.value
from
TableExample a
where
Table.field = *key value* -- finds the row in Table
AND a.field = *key value* -- finds the row in TableExample a
Here is another useful syntax:
UPDATE suppliers
SET supplier_name = (SELECT customers.name
FROM customers
WHERE customers.customer_id = suppliers.supplier_id)
WHERE EXISTS (SELECT customers.name
FROM customers
WHERE customers.customer_id = suppliers.supplier_id);
It checks if it is null or not by using "WHERE EXIST".
I add this only so you can see a quick way to write it so that you can check what will be updated before doing the update.
UPDATE Table
SET Table.col1 = other_table.col1,
Table.col2 = other_table.col2
--select Table.col1, other_table.col,Table.col2,other_table.col2, *
FROM Table
INNER JOIN other_table
ON Table.id = other_table.id
If you use MySQL instead of SQL Server, the syntax is:
UPDATE Table1
INNER JOIN Table2
ON Table1.id = Table2.id
SET Table1.col1 = Table2.col1,
Table1.col2 = Table2.col2
UPDATE from SELECT with INNER JOIN in SQL Database
Since there are too many replies of this post, which are most heavily up-voted, I thought I would provide my suggestion here too. Although the question is very interesting, I have seen in many forum sites and made a solution using INNER JOIN with screenshots.
At first, I have created a table named with schoolold and inserted few records with respect to their column names and execute it.
Then I executed SELECT command to view inserted records.
Then I created a new table named with schoolnew and similarly executed above actions on it.
Then, to view inserted records in it, I execute SELECT command.
Now, Here I want to make some changes in third and fourth row, to complete this action, I execute UPDATE command with INNER JOIN.
To view the changes I execute the SELECT command.
You can see how Third and Fourth records of table schoolold easily replaced with table schoolnew by using INNER JOIN with UPDATE statement.
And if you wanted to join the table with itself (which won't happen too often):
update t1 -- just reference table alias here
set t1.somevalue = t2.somevalue
from table1 t1 -- these rows will be the targets
inner join table1 t2 -- these rows will be used as source
on .................. -- the join clause is whatever suits you
Updating through CTE is more readable than the other answers here:
;WITH cte
AS (SELECT col1,col2,id
FROM other_table
WHERE sql = 'cool')
UPDATE A
SET A.col1 = B.col1,
A.col2 = B.col2
FROM table A
INNER JOIN cte B
ON A.id = B.id
The following example uses a derived table, a SELECT statement after the FROM clause, to return the old and new values for further updates:
UPDATE x
SET x.col1 = x.newCol1,
x.col2 = x.newCol2
FROM (SELECT t.col1,
t2.col1 AS newCol1,
t.col2,
t2.col2 AS newCol2
FROM [table] t
JOIN other_table t2
ON t.ID = t2.ID) x
If you are using SQL Server you can update one table from another without specifying a join and simply link the two from the where clause. This makes a much simpler SQL query:
UPDATE Table1
SET Table1.col1 = Table2.col1,
Table1.col2 = Table2.col2
FROM
Table2
WHERE
Table1.id = Table2.id
Consolidating all the different approaches here.
Select update
Update with a common table expression
Merge
Sample table structure is below and will update from Product_BAK to Product table.
Table Product
CREATE TABLE [dbo].[Product](
[Id] [int] IDENTITY(1, 1) NOT NULL,
[Name] [nvarchar](100) NOT NULL,
[Description] [nvarchar](100) NULL
) ON [PRIMARY]
Table Product_BAK
CREATE TABLE [dbo].[Product_BAK](
[Id] [int] IDENTITY(1, 1) NOT NULL,
[Name] [nvarchar](100) NOT NULL,
[Description] [nvarchar](100) NULL
) ON [PRIMARY]
1. Select update
update P1
set Name = P2.Name
from Product P1
inner join Product_Bak P2 on p1.id = P2.id
where p1.id = 2
2. Update with a common table expression
; With CTE as
(
select id, name from Product_Bak where id = 2
)
update P
set Name = P2.name
from product P inner join CTE P2 on P.id = P2.id
where P2.id = 2
3. Merge
Merge into product P1
using Product_Bak P2 on P1.id = P2.id
when matched then
update set p1.[description] = p2.[description], p1.name = P2.Name;
In this Merge statement, we can do insert if not finding a matching record in the target, but exist in the source and please find syntax:
Merge into product P1
using Product_Bak P2 on P1.id = P2.id;
when matched then
update set p1.[description] = p2.[description], p1.name = P2.Name;
WHEN NOT MATCHED THEN
insert (name, description)
values(p2.name, P2.description);
The other way is to use a derived table:
UPDATE t
SET t.col1 = a.col1
,t.col2 = a.col2
FROM (
SELECT id, col1, col2 FROM #tbl2) a
INNER JOIN #tbl1 t ON t.id = a.id
Sample data
DECLARE #tbl1 TABLE (id INT, col1 VARCHAR(10), col2 VARCHAR(10))
DECLARE #tbl2 TABLE (id INT, col1 VARCHAR(10), col2 VARCHAR(10))
INSERT #tbl1 SELECT 1, 'a', 'b' UNION SELECT 2, 'b', 'c'
INSERT #tbl2 SELECT 1, '1', '2' UNION SELECT 2, '3', '4'
UPDATE t
SET t.col1 = a.col1
,t.col2 = a.col2
FROM (
SELECT id, col1, col2 FROM #tbl2) a
INNER JOIN #tbl1 t ON t.id = a.id
SELECT * FROM #tbl1
SELECT * FROM #tbl2
UPDATE TQ
SET TQ.IsProcessed = 1, TQ.TextName = 'bla bla bla'
FROM TableQueue TQ
INNER JOIN TableComment TC ON TC.ID = TQ.TCID
WHERE TQ.IsProcessed = 0
To make sure you are updating what you want, select first
SELECT TQ.IsProcessed, 1 AS NewValue1, TQ.TextName, 'bla bla bla' AS NewValue2
FROM TableQueue TQ
INNER JOIN TableComment TC ON TC.ID = TQ.TCID
WHERE TQ.IsProcessed = 0
There is even a shorter method and it might be surprising for you:
Sample data set:
CREATE TABLE #SOURCE ([ID] INT, [Desc] VARCHAR(10));
CREATE TABLE #DEST ([ID] INT, [Desc] VARCHAR(10));
INSERT INTO #SOURCE VALUES(1,'Desc_1'), (2, 'Desc_2'), (3, 'Desc_3');
INSERT INTO #DEST VALUES(1,'Desc_4'), (2, 'Desc_5'), (3, 'Desc_6');
Code:
UPDATE #DEST
SET #DEST.[Desc] = #SOURCE.[Desc]
FROM #SOURCE
WHERE #DEST.[ID] = #SOURCE.[ID];
Use:
drop table uno
drop table dos
create table uno
(
uid int,
col1 char(1),
col2 char(2)
)
create table dos
(
did int,
col1 char(1),
col2 char(2),
[sql] char(4)
)
insert into uno(uid) values (1)
insert into uno(uid) values (2)
insert into dos values (1,'a','b',null)
insert into dos values (2,'c','d','cool')
select * from uno
select * from dos
EITHER:
update uno set col1 = (select col1 from dos where uid = did and [sql]='cool'),
col2 = (select col2 from dos where uid = did and [sql]='cool')
OR:
update uno set col1=d.col1,col2=d.col2 from uno
inner join dos d on uid=did where [sql]='cool'
select * from uno
select * from dos
If the ID column name is the same in both tables then just put the table name before the table to be updated and use an alias for the selected table, i.e.:
update uno set col1 = (select col1 from dos d where uno.[id] = d.[id] and [sql]='cool'),
col2 = (select col2 from dos d where uno.[id] = d.[id] and [sql]='cool')
In the accepted answer, after the:
SET
Table_A.col1 = Table_B.col1,
Table_A.col2 = Table_B.col2
I would add:
OUTPUT deleted.*, inserted.*
What I usually do is putting everything in a roll backed transaction and using the "OUTPUT": in this way I see everything that is about to happen. When I am happy with what I see, I change the ROLLBACK into COMMIT.
I usually need to document what I did, so I use the "results to Text" option when I run the roll-backed query and I save both the script and the result of the OUTPUT. (Of course this is not practical if I changed too many rows)
UPDATE table AS a
INNER JOIN table2 AS b
ON a.col1 = b.col1
INNER JOIN ... AS ...
ON ... = ...
SET ...
WHERE ...
The below solution works for a MySQL database:
UPDATE table1 a , table2 b
SET a.columname = 'some value'
WHERE b.columnname IS NULL ;
The other way to update from a select statement:
UPDATE A
SET A.col = A.col,B.col1 = B.col1
FROM first_Table AS A
INNER JOIN second_Table AS B ON A.id = B.id WHERE A.col2 = 'cool'
Option 1: Using Inner Join:
UPDATE
A
SET
A.col1 = B.col1,
A.col2 = B.col2
FROM
Some_Table AS A
INNER JOIN Other_Table AS B
ON A.id = B.id
WHERE
A.col3 = 'cool'
Option 2: Co related Sub query
UPDATE table
SET Col1 = B.Col1,
Col2 = B.Col2
FROM (
SELECT ID, Col1, Col2
FROM other_table) B
WHERE
B.ID = table.ID
UPDATE table1
SET column1 = (SELECT expression1
FROM table2
WHERE conditions)
[WHERE conditions];
The syntax for the UPDATE statement when updating one table with data from another table in SQL Server.
It is important to point out, as others have, that MySQL or MariaDB use a different syntax. Also it supports a very convenient USING syntax (in contrast to T/SQL). Also INNER JOIN is synonymous with JOIN. Therefore the query in the original question would be best implemented in MySQL thusly:
UPDATE
Some_Table AS Table_A
JOIN
Other_Table AS Table_B USING(id)
SET
Table_A.col1 = Table_B.col1,
Table_A.col2 = Table_B.col2
WHERE
Table_A.col3 = 'cool'
I've not seen the a solution to the asked question in the other answers, hence my two cents.
(tested on PHP 7.4.0 MariaDB 10.4.10)