I have an existing table in MS SQL called myTab.
It has the following fields
empno(PK) nchar(10),
age int
Now, i want to add a myGUID column and fill it up with a GUID whenever i insert a new row as well as Updating existing rows.
So i added the statement
ALTER TABLE myTab ADD myGUID uniqueidentifier DEFAULT NewId() NOT NULL;
Updating existing rows works correctly.
But, when i try to insert values,
INSERT INTO myTab VALUES ( 1000, 22 );
It fails, and gives the following message
**Column name or number of supplied values does not match table definition.**
When i do
insert into sourav_test2 values (20055711,23,NEWID());
The above statement works.
I want a GUID to be filled without changing the insert statement. Is it possible via a Trigger or a Function?
Always list the columns you are inserting!
INSERT INTO myTab (empno, age)
VALUES ('1000', 22);
Also use correct types for the values. Unmentioned columns will be assigned their default values, or NULL if there is no explicit default.
Your table has three columns, so if you leave out the column list, then the insert expects three values. You can still set a default, if you want by using the DEFAULT keyword in the VALUES clause:
INSERT INTO myTab (empno, age, myGUID)
VALUES ('1000', 22, DEFAULT);
Sourav's question about triggers got me thinking, so I tried a little test. Why?
Imagine a scenario where an application has already been written with thousands of INSERT statements that leave off the column list. In this case, if you could write an INSTEAD OF INSERT trigger that provides the column list, you could hopefully save yourself from correcting thousands of INSERT statements due to a newly added column.
Off the top of my head, I admittedly did not know if this could work.
So I wrote this little test:
CREATE TABLE tt (ColA varchar(1));
INSERT INTO tt VALUES ('a');
ALTER TABLE tt
ADD ColB uniqueidentifier DEFAULT NEWID();
GO
CREATE TRIGGER tr_tt
ON tt
INSTEAD OF INSERT
AS
INSERT INTO tt (ColA)
SELECT ColA FROM inserted;
GO
INSERT INTO tt VALUES ('a');
SELECT * FROM tt;
DROP TABLE tt;
I also tried a variation of the TRIGGER with the following INSERT just to be thorough:
INSERT INTO tt (ColA, ColB)
SELECT ColA, NEWID() FROM inserted;
The result was the same in both cases: The same error as reported in the question. So to answer the question:
Can't we use a trigger here which can do it?
The answer is NO. Even if you put an INSTEAD OF INSERT TRIGGER on the table, the parser will still not let you write an INSERT..VALUES() statement unless the number and order of VALUES exactly matches the definition of the table. A TRIGGER cannot be used to get around it.
Sooner or later, lazy coding exacts its price.
What's wrong with this query:
INSERT INTO Users( weight, desiredWeight ) VALUES ( 160, 145 ) WHERE id = 1;
It works without the WHERE clause. I've seemed to have forgot my SQL.
MySQL INSERT Syntax does not support the WHERE clause so your query as it stands will fail. Assuming your id column is unique or primary key:
If you're trying to insert a new row with ID 1 you should be using:
INSERT INTO Users(id, weight, desiredWeight) VALUES(1, 160, 145);
If you're trying to change the weight/desiredWeight values for an existing row with ID 1 you should be using:
UPDATE Users SET weight = 160, desiredWeight = 145 WHERE id = 1;
If you want you can also use INSERT .. ON DUPLICATE KEY syntax like so:
INSERT INTO Users (id, weight, desiredWeight) VALUES(1, 160, 145) ON DUPLICATE KEY UPDATE weight=160, desiredWeight=145
OR even like so:
INSERT INTO Users SET id=1, weight=160, desiredWeight=145 ON DUPLICATE KEY UPDATE weight=160, desiredWeight=145
It's also important to note that if your id column is an autoincrement column then you might as well omit it from your INSERT all together and let mysql increment it as normal.
You can't combine a WHERE clause with a VALUES clause. You have two options as far as I am aware-
INSERT specifying values
INSERT INTO Users(weight, desiredWeight)
VALUES (160,145)
INSERT using a SELECT statement
INSERT INTO Users(weight, desiredWeight)
SELECT weight, desiredWeight
FROM AnotherTable
WHERE id = 1
You use the WHERE clause for UPDATE queries. When you INSERT, you are assuming that the row doesn't exist.
The OP's statement would then become;
UPDATE Users SET weight = 160, desiredWeight = 45 where id = 1;
In MySQL, if you want to INSERT or UPDATE, you can use the REPLACE query with a WHERE clause. If the WHERE doesn't exist, it INSERTS, otherwise it UPDATES.
EDIT
I think that Bill Karwin's point is important enough to pull up out of the comments and make it very obvious. Thanks Bill, it has been too long since I have worked with MySQL, I remembered that I had issues with REPLACE, but I forgot what they were. I should have looked it up.
That's not how MySQL's REPLACE works. It does a DELETE (which may be a no-op if the row does not exist), followed by an INSERT. Think of the consequences vis. triggers and foreign key dependencies. Instead, use INSERT...ON DUPLICATE KEY UPDATE.
I do not believe the insert has a WHERE clause.
Insert query doesn't support where keyword*
Conditions apply because you can use where condition for sub-select statements.
You can perform complicated inserts using sub-selects.
For example:
INSERT INTO suppliers
(supplier_id, supplier_name)
SELECT account_no, name
FROM customers
WHERE city = 'Newark';
By placing a "select" in the insert statement, you can perform multiples inserts quickly.
With this type of insert, you may wish to check for the number of rows being inserted. You can determine the number of rows that will be inserted by running the following SQL statement before performing the insert.
SELECT count(*)
FROM customers
WHERE city = 'Newark';
You can make sure that you do not insert duplicate information by using the EXISTS condition.
For example, if you had a table named clients with a primary key of client_id, you could use the following statement:
INSERT INTO clients
(client_id, client_name, client_type)
SELECT supplier_id, supplier_name, 'advertising'
FROM suppliers
WHERE not exists (select * from clients
where clients.client_id = suppliers.supplier_id);
This statement inserts multiple records with a subselect.
If you wanted to insert a single record, you could use the following statement:
INSERT INTO clients
(client_id, client_name, client_type)
SELECT 10345, 'IBM', 'advertising'
FROM dual
WHERE not exists (select * from clients
where clients.client_id = 10345);
The use of the dual table allows you to enter your values in a select statement, even though the values are not currently stored in a table.
See also How to insert with where clause
The right answer to this question will be sth like this:
a). IF want select before insert :
INSERT INTO Users( weight, desiredWeight )
select val1 , val2 from tableXShoulatNotBeUsers
WHERE somecondition;
b). IF record already exists use update instead of insert:
INSERT INTO Users( weight, desiredWeight ) VALUES ( 160, 145 ) WHERE id = 1;
Should be
Update Users set weight=160, desiredWeight=145 WHERE id = 1;
c). If you want to update or insert at the same time
Replace Users set weight=160, desiredWeight=145 WHERE id = 1;
Note):- you should provide values to all fields else missed field in query
will be set to null
d). If you want to CLONE a record from SAME table, just remember you cann't select
from table to which you are inserting therefore
create temporary table xtable ( weight int(11), desiredWeight int(11) ;
insert into xtable (weight, desiredWeight)
select weight, desiredWeight from Users where [condition]
insert into Users (weight, desiredWeight)
select weight , desiredWeight from xtable;
I think this pretty covers most of the scenarios
You simply cannot use WHERE when doing an INSERT statement:
INSERT INTO Users( weight, desiredWeight ) VALUES ( 160, 145 ) WHERE id = 1;
should be:
INSERT INTO Users( weight, desiredWeight ) VALUES ( 160, 145 );
The WHERE part only works in SELECT statements:
SELECT from Users WHERE id = 1;
or in UPDATE statements:
UPDATE Users set (weight = 160, desiredWeight = 145) WHERE id = 1;
A way to use INSERT and WHERE is
INSERT INTO MYTABLE SELECT 953,'Hello',43 WHERE 0 in (SELECT count(*) FROM MYTABLE WHERE myID=953);
In this case ist like an exist-test. There is no exception if you run it two or more times...
I think that the correct form to insert a value on a specify row is:
UPDATE table SET column = value WHERE columnid = 1
it works, and is similar if you write on Microsoft SQL Server
INSERT INTO table(column) VALUES (130) WHERE id = 1;
on mysql you have to Update the table.
Insert into = Adding rows to a table
Upate = update specific rows.
What would the where clause describe in your insert?
It doesn't have anything to match, the row doesn't exist (yet)...
You can do conditional INSERT based on user input.
This query will do insert only if input vars '$userWeight' and '$userDesiredWeight' are not blank
INSERT INTO Users(weight, desiredWeight )
select '$userWeight', '$userDesiredWeight'
FROM (select 1 a ) dummy
WHERE '$userWeight' != '' AND '$userDesiredWeight'!='';
If you are looking to insert some values into a new column of an altered table in each rows by mentioning its primary key, then just-->
UPDATE <table_name> SET <column_name> = '<value> WHERE <primary_key> = <primary_value>
It depends on the situation INSERT can actually have a where clause.
For example if you are matching values from a form.
Consider INSERT INTO Users(name,email,weight, desiredWeight) VALUES (fred,bb#yy.com,160,145) WHERE name != fred AND email != bb#yy.com
Makes sense doesn't it?
The simplest way is to use IF to violate your a key constraint. This only works for INSERT IGNORE but will allow you to use constraint in a INSERT.
INSERT INTO Test (id, name) VALUES (IF(1!=0,NULL,1),'Test');
After WHERE clause you put a condition, and it is used for either fetching data or for updating a row. When you are inserting data, it is assumed that the row does not exist.
So, the question is, is there any row whose id is 1? if so, use MySQL UPDATE, else use MySQL INSERT.
If you are specifying a particular record no for inserting data its better to use UPDATE statement instead of INSERT statement.
This type of query you have written in the question is like a dummy query.
Your Query is :-
INSERT INTO Users( weight, desiredWeight ) VALUES ( 160, 145 ) WHERE id = 1;
Here , you are specifying the id=1 , so better you use UPDATE statement to update the existing record.It is not recommended to use WHERE clause in case of INSERT.You should use UPDATE .
Now Using Update Query :-
UPDATE Users SET weight=160,desiredWeight=145 WHERE id=1;
Does WHERE-clause can be actually used with INSERT-INTO-VALUES in any
case?
The answer is definitively no.
Adding a WHERE clause after INSERT INTO ... VALUES ... is just invalid SQL, and will not parse.
The error returned by MySQL is:
mysql> INSERT INTO Users( weight, desiredWeight ) VALUES ( 160, 145 ) WHERE id = 1;
ERROR 1064 (42000): You have an error in your SQL syntax; check the manual that corresponds to your MySQL server version for the right syntax to use near 'WHERE id = 1' at line 1
The most important part of the error message is
... syntax to use near 'WHERE id = 1' ...
which shows the specific part the parser did not expect to find here: the WHERE clause.
its totall wrong. INSERT QUERY does not have a WHERE clause, Only UPDATE QUERY has it. If you want to add data Where id = 1 then your Query will be
UPDATE Users SET weight=160, desiredWeight= 145 WHERE id = 1;
No. As far as I am aware you cannot add the WHERE clause into this query. Maybe I've forgotten my SQL too, because I am not really sure why you need it anyway.
You Should not use where condition in Insert statement. If you want to do, use insert in a update statement and then update a existing record.
Actually can i know why you need a where clause in Insert statement??
Maybe based on the reason I might suggest you a better option.
I think your best option is use REPLACE instead INSERT
REPLACE INTO Users(id, weight, desiredWeight) VALUES(1, 160, 145);
DO READ THIS AS WELL
It doesn't make sense... even literally
INSERT means add a new row and when you say WHERE you define which row are you talking about in the SQL.
So adding a new row is not possible with a condition on an existing row.
You have to choose from the following:
A. Use UPDATE instead of INSERT
B. Use INSERT and remove WHERE clause ( I am just saying it...) or if you are real bound to use INSERT and WHERE in a single statement it can be done only via INSERT..SELECT clause...
INSERT INTO Users( weight, desiredWeight )
SELECT FROM Users WHERE id = 1;
But this serves an entirely different purpose and if you have defined id as Primary Key this insert will be failure, otherwise a new row will be inserted with id = 1.
I am aware that this is a old post but I hope that this will still help somebody, with what I hope is a simple example:
background:
I had a many to many case: the same user is listed multiple times with multiple values and I wanted to Create a new record, hence UPDATE wouldn't make sense in my case and I needed to address a particular user just like I would do using a WHERE clause.
INSERT into MyTable(aUser,aCar)
value(User123,Mini)
By using this construct you actually target a specific user (user123,who has other records) so you don't really need a where clause, I reckon.
the output could be:
aUser aCar
user123 mini
user123 HisOtherCarThatWasThereBefore
correct syntax for mysql insert into statement using post method is:
$sql="insert into ttable(username,password) values('$_POST[username]','$_POST[password]')";
i dont think that we can use where clause in insert statement
INSERT INTO Users(weight, desiredWeight )
SELECT '$userWeight', '$userDesiredWeight'
FROM (select 1 a ) dummy
WHERE '$userWeight' != '' AND '$userDesiredWeight'!='';
You can't use INSERT and WHERE together. You can use UPDATE clause for add value to particular column in particular field like below code;
UPDATE Users
SET weight='160',desiredWeight ='145'
WHERE id =1
You can do that with the below code:
INSERT INTO table2 (column1, column2, column3, ...)
SELECT column1, column2, column3, ...
FROM table1
WHERE condition
I think you should do it like this, if you want to validate table not to use email twice
Code :
INSERT INTO tablename(fullname,email)
SELECT * FROM (SELECT 'fullnameValue' AS fullname_field,'emailValue' AS email_field) entry WHERE entry.email_field NOT IN (SELECT email FROM tablename);
All the above answers give you the plain MySQL statements.
If you are using the where condition in PHPMyAdmin to update the existing row of a table, below is the suggestion to use.
UPDATE `Table_Name` SET `row1`='[value-1]',`row2`='[value-2]',`row3`='[value-3]' WHERE 1
You can include any value between '' of each row. Not necessarily to put [] to indicate the value. Do not change anything after where. Simply click go after giving the value to update.
Example:
UPDATE `Mytable_name` SET `abc`='xyz',`def`='uvw'
WHERE 1
From my code (Java) I want to ensure that a row exists in the database (DB2) after my code is executed.
My code now does a select and if no result is returned it does an insert. I really don't like this code since it exposes me to concurrency issues when running in a multi-threaded environment.
What I would like to do is to put this logic in DB2 instead of in my Java code.
Does DB2 have an insert-or-update statement? Or anything like it that I can use?
For example:
insertupdate into mytable values ('myid')
Another way of doing it would probably be to always do the insert and catch "SQL-code -803 primary key already exists", but I would like to avoid that if possible.
Yes, DB2 has the MERGE statement, which will do an UPSERT (update or insert).
MERGE INTO target_table USING source_table ON match-condition
{WHEN [NOT] MATCHED
THEN [UPDATE SET ...|DELETE|INSERT VALUES ....|SIGNAL ...]}
[ELSE IGNORE]
See:
http://publib.boulder.ibm.com/infocenter/db2luw/v9/index.jsp?topic=/com.ibm.db2.udb.admin.doc/doc/r0010873.htm
https://www.ibm.com/support/knowledgecenter/en/SS6NHC/com.ibm.swg.im.dashdb.sql.ref.doc/doc/r0010873.html
https://www.ibm.com/developerworks/community/blogs/SQLTips4DB2LUW/entry/merge?lang=en
I found this thread because I really needed a one-liner for DB2 INSERT OR UPDATE.
The following syntax seems to work, without requiring a separate temp table.
It works by using VALUES() to create a table structure . The SELECT * seems surplus IMHO but without it I get syntax errors.
MERGE INTO mytable AS mt USING (
SELECT * FROM TABLE (
VALUES
(123, 'text')
)
) AS vt(id, val) ON (mt.id = vt.id)
WHEN MATCHED THEN
UPDATE SET val = vt.val
WHEN NOT MATCHED THEN
INSERT (id, val) VALUES (vt.id, vt.val)
;
if you have to insert more than one row, the VALUES part can be repeated without having to duplicate the rest.
VALUES
(123, 'text'),
(456, 'more')
The result is a single statement that can INSERT OR UPDATE one or many rows presumably as an atomic operation.
This response is to hopefully fully answer the query MrSimpleMind had in use-update-and-insert-in-same-query and to provide a working simple example of the DB2 MERGE statement with a scenario of inserting AND updating in one go (record with ID 2 is updated and record ID 3 inserted).
CREATE TABLE STAGE.TEST_TAB ( ID INTEGER, DATE DATE, STATUS VARCHAR(10) );
COMMIT;
INSERT INTO TEST_TAB VALUES (1, '2013-04-14', NULL), (2, '2013-04-15', NULL); COMMIT;
MERGE INTO TEST_TAB T USING (
SELECT
3 NEW_ID,
CURRENT_DATE NEW_DATE,
'NEW' NEW_STATUS
FROM
SYSIBM.DUAL
UNION ALL
SELECT
2 NEW_ID,
NULL NEW_DATE,
'OLD' NEW_STATUS
FROM
SYSIBM.DUAL
) AS S
ON
S.NEW_ID = T.ID
WHEN MATCHED THEN
UPDATE SET
(T.STATUS) = (S.NEW_STATUS)
WHEN NOT MATCHED THEN
INSERT
(T.ID, T.DATE, T.STATUS) VALUES (S.NEW_ID, S.NEW_DATE, S.NEW_STATUS);
COMMIT;
Another way is to execute this 2 queries. It's simpler than create a MERGE statement:
update TABLE_NAME set FIELD_NAME=xxxxx where MyID=XXX;
INSERT INTO TABLE_NAME (MyField1,MyField2) values (xxx,xxxxx)
WHERE NOT EXISTS(select 1 from TABLE_NAME where MyId=xxxx);
The first query just updateS the field you need, if the MyId exists.
The second insertS the row into db if MyId does not exist.
The result is that only one of the queries is executed in your db.
I started with hibernate project where hibernate allows you to saveOrUpdate().
I converted that project into JDBC project the problem was with save and update.
I wanted to save and update at the same time using JDBC.
So, I did some research and I came accross ON DUPLICATE KEY UPDATE :
String sql="Insert into tblstudent (firstName,lastName,gender) values (?,?,?)
ON DUPLICATE KEY UPDATE
firstName= VALUES(firstName),
lastName= VALUES(lastName),
gender= VALUES(gender)";
The issue with the above code was that it updated primary key twice which is true as
per mysql documentation:
The affected rows is just a return code. 1 row means you inserted, 2 means you updated, 0 means nothing happend.
I introduced id and increment it to 1. Now I was incrementing the value of id and not mysql.
String sql="Insert into tblstudent (id,firstName,lastName,gender) values (?,?,?)
ON DUPLICATE KEY UPDATE
id=id+1,
firstName= VALUES(firstName),
lastName= VALUES(lastName),
gender= VALUES(gender)";
The above code worked for me for both insert and update.
Hope it works for you as well.