Multiple Delete Statements Inside of Cursor DB2 - sql

I am attempting to delete from multiple tables within a cursor in a DB2 system. However the terminator character ; is causing my cursor to exit prematurely. Currently I can not determine another way to set this query up to achieve the desired results.
I tried the below statement:
DECLARE C1 CURSOR FOR
DELETE FROM TABLE1 WHERE ACCOUNT_NUMBER = ACCOUNT_NUMBER_PARAM;
DELETE FROM TABLE2 WHERE ACCOUNT_NUMBER = ACCOUNT_NUMBER_PARAM;
DELETE FROM TABLE3 WHERE ACCOUNT_NUMBER = ACCOUNT_NUMBER_PARAM;
DELETE FROM TABLE4 WHERE ACCOUNT_NUMBER = ACCOUNT_NUMBER_PARAM;
DELETE FROM TABLE5 WHERE ACCOUNT_NUMBER = ACCOUNT_NUMBER_PARAM;
DELETE FROM TABLE6 WHERE ACCOUNT_NUMBER = ACCOUNT_NUMBER_PARAM;
DELETE FROM TABLE7 WHERE ACCOUNT_NUMBER = ACCOUNT_NUMBER_PARAM;
However this did not run as expected, meaning that it will not loop through a cursor, instead it just runs once.
This also fails to run:
--#SET TERMINATOR #
DECLARE C1 CURSOR FOR
SELECT * FROM TABLE1 WHERE ACCOUNT_NUMBER = ACCOUNT_NUMBER_PARAM#
SELECT * FROM TABLE2 WHERE ACCOUNT_NUMBER = ACCOUNT_NUMBER_PARAM#
SELECT * FROM TABLE3 WHERE ACCOUNT_NUMBER = ACCOUNT_NUMBER_PARAM#
SELECT * FROM TABLE4 WHERE ACCOUNT_NUMBER = ACCOUNT_NUMBER_PARAM#
SELECT * FROM TABLE5 WHERE ACCOUNT_NUMBER = ACCOUNT_NUMBER_PARAM#
SELECT * FROM TABLE6 WHERE ACCOUNT_NUMBER = ACCOUNT_NUMBER_PARAM#
SELECT * FROM TABLE7 WHERE ACCOUNT_NUMBER = ACCOUNT_NUMBER_PARAM#;
OPEN C1#
Here I tried to change the cursor terminator character so that it would get further down and actually open and run the cursor, however this threw a an error and did not run at all.
How can I rewrite this statement to run multiple select statements within a cursor?

After the OPEN C1 you need to loop through the results stored in the cursor.
with the
OPEN C1
FETCH NEXT FROM C1 INTO #Variable1,#Variable2,....( as many as fields in the table )
WHILE ##FETCH_STATUS = 0
BEGIN
FETCH NEXT FROM C1 INTO #Variable1,#Variable2,....( as many as fields in the table )
END
CLOSE CURSOR
DEALLOCATE CURSOS

why do you need a cursor to delete data?
It is far better to do this:
DELETE FROM table1 WHERE colname = (SELECT colname FROM table1 WHERE condition);
DELETE FROM table2 WHERE colname = (SELECT colname FROM table2 WHERE condition);
DELETE FROM table3 WHERE colname = (SELECT colname FROM table3 WHERE condition);
DELETE FROM table4 WHERE colname = (SELECT colname FROM table4 WHERE condition);
There should be no problem running this in a stored procedure.

Related

Delete two tables based on results of one join

I am trying to delete data from two tables at the same time using inner join. However when I tried to run my query, an error
SQL command not properly ended
error came out.
A brief background of what I am trying to do and some info on the tables, table1 and table2. So both tables has a same field, for instance "ABC". I would like to delete data from both tables using inner join but under the where condition of a field (XYZ) under table where it equals to a value.
This is my sql statment:
DELETE table1, table2
FROM table1
INNER JOIN table1 ON table1.ABC = table2.ABC
WHERE table1.XYZ = 'TESTIT';
You can't delete more than one table.
You must use two different DELETE statements.
For this you can create a temporary table to store IDs to delete, for example:
CREATE TABLE app (ABC varchar(100))
INSERT INTO app (ABC)
SELECT abc
FROM table1
INNER JOIN table1 ON table1.ABC = table2.ABC
WHERE table1.XYZ = 'TESTIT';
DELETE
FROM table1
WHERE table1.ABC IN (SELECT ABC FROM app);
DELETE
FROM table2
WHERE table2.ABC IN (SELECT ABC FROM app);
DROP TABLE app;
In Oracle you cannot delete from 2 tables in a single statement like you are doing. The syntax is wrong. You can use as below:
DELETE table1
where table1.ABC = (select table2.ABC
from table2
WHERE table2.ABC = table1.ABC
and table1.XYZ = 'TESTIT');
A PL/SQL solution might be something like this:
declare
type abc_tt is table of table1.abc%type index by pls_integer;
l_abc_collection abc_tt;
begin
select distinct t1.abc bulk collect into l_abc_collection
from table1 t1
join table2 t2 on t2.abc = t1.abc
where t1.xyz = 'TESTIT';
dbms_output.put_line('Stored ' || l_abc_collection.count || ' values for processing');
forall i in 1..l_abc_collection.count
delete table1 t
where t.xyz = 'TESTIT'
and t.abc = l_abc_collection(i);
dbms_output.put_line('Deleted ' || sql%rowcount || ' rows from table1');
forall i in 1..l_abc_collection.count
delete table2 t
where t.xyz = 'TESTIT'
and t.abc = l_abc_collection(i);
dbms_output.put_line('Deleted ' || sql%rowcount || ' rows from table2');
end;
Output:
Stored 1000 values for processing
Deleted 1000 rows from table1
Deleted 1000 rows from table1
Test setup:
create table table1 (abc, xyz) as
select rownum, 'TESTIT' from dual connect by rownum <= 1000
union all
select rownum, 'OTHER' from dual connect by rownum <= 100;
create table table2 as select * from table1;
After deletion there are 100 rows in each table. I have assumed we only want to delete the ones where xyz = 'TESTIT' even when abc values are common to both tables.
select distinct table1.ABC into Temptable
FROM table1
INNER JOIN table1 ON table1.ABC = table2.ABC
WHERE table1.XYZ = 'TESTIT'
delete table1 where ABC in (select ABC from Temptable)
delete table2 where ABC in (select ABC from Temptable)
drop table Temptable

select->insert->delete into one sql statement: possible?

I have 3 tables, T1 T2 and T3.
Each table has the same columns, except for T3 which has one additional "code" column.
My logic is the following:
-I have to search for any rows in T1 which are also contained in T2.
-For each found row I have to move it in T3, this would mean deleting it from T1 and create it into T3, with code 100.
I know that oracle allows for an insert...from select statement, in which case I have this:
insert into T3 (100,c1,c2,c3)
select c1,c2,c3 from T1 where exists (select null from T2 where
c1=T1.c1 and c2=T1.c2 and c3=T1.c3);
This solves the select/insert problem, but would it be possible to add a delete from T1 without having to repeat the select statement?
You are probably looking for MERGE
This statement is a convenient way to combine multiple operations. It
lets you avoid multiple INSERT, UPDATE, and DELETE DML statements.
Example
This example has all 3 DML operation (INSERT,UPDATE and DELETE)
MERGE INTO bonuses D
USING (SELECT employee_id, salary, department_id FROM employees
WHERE department_id = 80) S
ON (D.employee_id = S.employee_id)
WHEN MATCHED THEN UPDATE SET D.bonus = D.bonus + S.salary*.01
DELETE WHERE (S.salary > 8000)
WHEN NOT MATCHED THEN INSERT (D.employee_id, D.bonus)
VALUES (S.employee_id, S.salary*0.1)
WHERE (S.salary <= 8000);
Answer to OP
MERGE INTO tab3 D
USING (SELECT col1 FROM tab1 where col1 in(select col1 from tab2)) S
ON (D.col1 = S.col1)
WHEN NOT MATCHED THEN
INSERT (D.col1,D.code)
values(S.COL1,100);
DELETE tab1 WHERE(col1 in(select col1 from tab2) );
I have tested and working fine.
Perhaps useful to use cycle:
BEGIN
FOR rec IN
(SELECT c1, c2, c3 from T1 WHERE EXISTS (SELECT NULL FROM T2 WHERE
c1 = T1.c1 AND c2 = T1.c2 AND c3 = T1.c3))
LOOP
INSERT INTO T3 (100, rec.c1, rec.c2, rec.c3);
DELETE FROM T1 WHERE T1.c1 = rec.c1
and T1.c2 = rec.c2
AND T1.c3 = rec.c3;
END LOOP;
END;

Fetching data from tables whose names are stored in a table?

I have a table lets say table_names which contains some table names ( table1 , table2 ,table3 etc ). Now I want to fetch the data from table1 , table2 , table3 etc by going through the table table_names.
I am unable to achieve this task. Could anyone please help me out of this situation ?
I am using Oracle DB.
Thank you in advance.
If from TableA you have to get value from Single table then use this,
SELECT * FROM (SELECT table_name FROM tableA WHERE id=3)AS b
Otherwise from getting from multiple table, I prefer below PHP-
while($a=mysql_fetch_assoc(mysql_query((SELECT table_name FROM tableA)))
{ $tablename=$a[table_name];
while($b=mysql_fetch_assoc(mysql_query((SELECT * FROM $tablename))))
{
echo $b[column_name];
}
}
try this query:
DECLARE
str VARCHAR2(30);
num number(5);
BEGIN
SELECT count(*) into num FROM table_names;
FOR i in 1..num loop
SELECT name into str FROM
(SELECT ROWNUM r,t.name FROM table_names t) where r = i;
EXECUTE IMMEDIATE 'SELECT * FROM '||str;
str:='';
end loop;
END;
Select t1.,t2.,t3.* from table1 t1,table2 t2, table3 t3 where (select name from tables)

Delete rows out of table that is innerjoined and unioned with 2 others

We have 3 tables (table1, table2, table3), and I need to delete all the rows from table1 that have the same ID in table2 OR table3. To see a list of all of these rows I have this code:
(
select
table2.ID,
table2.name_first,
table2.name_last,
table2.Collected
from
table2
inner join
table1
on
table1.ID = table2.ID
where
table2.Collected = 'Y'
)
union
(
select
table3.ID,
table3.name_first,
table3.name_last,
table3.Collected
from
table3
inner join
table1
on
table1.ID = table3.ID
where
table3.Collected = 'Y'
)
I get back about 200 rows. How do I delete them from table1? I don't have a way to test if my query will work, so I'm nervous about modifying something I found online and potentially deleting data (we do have backups, but I'd rather not test out their integrity).
TIA!
EDIT
You are correct, we are on MSSQL 2008. Thanks so much for all the replies, I will try it out tomorrow!
Try this:
DELETE FROM Table1 WHERE
ID IN
(
SELECT ID FROM Table2 WHERE Collected = 'Y'
UNION ALL
SELECT ID FROM Table3 WHERE Collected = 'Y'
)
To test this query you can create dupicate tables using into clause i.e.(I assume it is SQL Server):
SELECT * INTO DUP_Table1 FROM Table1;
SELECT * INTO DUP_Table2 FROM Table2;
SELECT * INTO DUP_Table3 FROM Table3;
and then run this query:
DELETE FROM DUP_Table1 WHERE
ID IN
(
SELECT ID FROM DUP_Table2 WHERE Collected = 'Y'
UNION ALL
SELECT ID FROM DUP_Table3 WHERE Collected = 'Y'
)
EDIT: Added the Collected Criteria and used UNION ALL (#Thomas: Thanks..) I think performance of UNION ALL is better than UNION when there is no need for uniqueness in the result.
DELETE FROM table1
WHERE EXISTS (SELECT 1 FROM table2 WHERE table2.id = table1.id AND table2.collected = 'Y')
OR EXISTS (SELECT 1 FROM table3 WHERE table3.id = table1.id AND table3.collected = 'Y')
If you're feeling nervous about a big delete like this, put it into a transaction: that way you can at least check the row count before running commit (or rollback, of course :p)
Make sure foreign keys are setup properly and turn on cascade deletes. But if that's not an option, the correct SQL query is as follows:
begin tran
delete from table1
where exists(select * from table2 where table1.id = id and collected='Y')
or exists(select * from table3 where table1.id = id and collected='Y')
-- commit tran
-- rollback tran
if the SQL runs as expected, execute the "commit tran", otherwise execute the "rollback tran".

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)