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05:22
morning
@Wietlol usually we don't catch exceptions, we run transactions and either execute everything or nothing. If it blows up you get the error in your face, and that's usually all you need to work.
E.g. if you want to bulk-insert 1 million rows you can't afford to handle exceptions, you just try to insert and if one row is duplicated you simply stop and rollback to the last checkpoint
What are you trying to accomplish?
understanding what my teacher is all about
he uses it pretty much in every trigger and stored procedure
Well, the only instance where catching and throwing is actually useful is when you actually develop stuff in your databases. It works for certain RDBMS with very specific focuses like OLAP-based warehousing.
05:38
yea, at school, we currently have "advanced databases with sql"
which means... your database is your data store, your back-end, your front-end, your dev-tools, your monitoring system, your ticket system, your documentation source and your operating system
my life currently exists of stored procedures, triggers, a ton of check constraints, execution plans and meaningful errors
oh... not to mention.... indices
welcome to SQL
06:30
morning
@Wietlol Here's an exception catch I just made for an automated script
exception
    when others then
        DBMS_OUTPUT.PUT_LINE('Error controlado al ejecutar script: ' || sqlerrm);
end;
I believe that's close to what you were doing?
I had to bulk update and report errors specifically, so had to do that
06:52
I just tested a fair update using yesterday's paradigm
Which loosely resembles tuples in C# by the way
UPDATE qwdpao
SET
    vlnull = 1
WHERE
    (obpre, co) in
    (
        ('','GREE_SEQ'),
        ('','FCLLVH_COD'),
         -- ...
     );
That script had to update about 300 fields and returned 2300 changes :|
So perhaps it's not the same to say these two:
where (foo,bar) in (baz,gee);
where foo = baz and bar = gee;
however!
select * from qwdpao
WHERE
    (obpre, co) = ('','GREE_SEQ');
Throws an exception
07:15
morning gents
sup
I managed to make the row-value selection work
@HéctorÁlvarez well done
However it only works for updates, not for selects
what did you have to change to get it working?
I just added more conditions on top, it was syntactically correct
but I still have to find out why I can't select with those conditions
07:41
it doesnt seem to work in sql 2012, was it added in 2016? We are waiting for 2019 to update.... feels like forever
I believe SQL Server doesn't have support for this feature
It's one of those details that makes the pain of using Oracle worth the investment.
07:56
ok thanks.
Can confirm, Oracle only supports range values in where condition, and also has an optimizer feature to handle best-case-scenario indexes, SQL Server and SQLite have none of these features
PostgreSQL also supports data ranges
And suprisingly enough, so does MySQL
Cool... Was also wondering how come i haven't seen it before (I only work with sql server)
08:29
Breakthrough!
It works, it works!
Took me a while to realize the guide had a syntax mistake, I only had to double up parenthesis
09:24
@HéctorÁlvarez I guess you would probably have to join the table on itself then
What do you mean?
tbh i am not really sure, i have never come across an example like the one you sent so i am not sure on the equivalent
SQL Server has some hack to mimic that to some extent.
But it's not even close as gorgeous as Oracle makes it
oracle never make anything nice
My experience so far is the opposite
If anything they offer a lot new options that I didn't have in TSQL
The bargaining asset for SQL Server is SSMS though
Oracle doesn't have an equivalent tool
 
1 hour later…
10:40
while doing a select or query a table with a specific data i get error of: conversion of the nvarchar value 'blah blah blah' overflowed n int column
what could that be ?
11:20
that your nvarchar column is waaay to big
try to convert it to bigint and make sure it actually is an only numbers in it
12:21
starting to hate django
Isn't Django related to python?
riiight it is
@HéctorÁlvarez +1
Sly
Sly
Good morning team
@Sly hey
Sly
Sly
I am trying to find cases where the primary key in temp table does not exist in permanent table but my query is returning true all the time. Need some suggestions on where I might be going wrong
moment I am formatting my query
SELECT
a.NUMBER,
a.ID,
a.NAME,
a.PDT,
b.ID


FROM permanet_table A ,temTable B

WHERE NOT EXISTS (SELECT * FROM temTable a WHERE a.ID = b.ID ) ;
12:33
Welcome Sly
@Sly the exists is definitely not fitted for whatever you want to do
Sly
Sly
@HéctorÁlvarez
I understand you are new at SQL, is that correct?
Sly
Sly
@AndyK , You mean that it wont work the way I am expecting right
I mean, that query doesn't make sense
Sly
Sly
12:34
@HéctorÁlvarez Yes
If I undestand what you're trying to do, what you need to do is a substraction
The idea is (select * from table) - (results that match temp and real tables)
do you know what a Join is?
That's the mandatory Joins 101 venn diagram
Sly
Sly
@HéctorÁlvarez Yes I know what join is, but I rather not do a join because the permanent table is very huge in the upwards of 15M record
Doesn't matter, because when this runs: WHERE NOT EXISTS (SELECT * FROM temTable a WHERE a.ID = b.ID ) ; it's going to kill the DB anyway
Sly
Sly
Here is the requirement-: I have three tables. table 1 is a subset of permanent table in the above query, temp table is a staging table that feeds into permanent table, so what I want to do is check for new data in the temp table and make sure its not on the permanent table the insert in my table 1
You can do a stored procedure that checks agaisnt whatever table and if it exists, then insert into the other table.
select count(*) from tableA where id = <the field you want to insert>
Sly
Sly
12:42
@HéctorÁlvarez, I am not sure how I will approach that, any suggestions or outline and I can fill in the gaps?
and put that inside a case when count > 0 then <handle error> else <insert into table C>
Or use EXISTS instead of a count, and you'll save yourself some precious CPU cycles
Sly
Sly
@HéctorÁlvarez with the info I have provided , it possible to give me an entire outline and I can fill in the gaps?
Right now I don't have time to write the script myself.
Sly
Sly
cool
In any case, I'm not usually prone to do homework for people, I'm always happy to help though
Sly
Sly
12:48
@HéctorÁlvarez No, I wasn't asking for you to do my home work sorry if that's how it came across partner
0
Q: How to deal with a `relation "cms_disclaimerpanel" already exists` and ProgrammingError: column "http_request_lang" of relation "xyz" does not exist

Andy KI have a rather annoying issue when trying to send my merge to my automated tests on circle CI. Just for the context, I've inherited a project where the authors are no longer working at my current work. I'm working on django and I've done a merge, from my local dev branch to my local master bra...

@Veljko89 that helped, instead though i just used cast where the column was int
I'm off for the weekend
see you around
@HéctorÁlvarez lucky boy
13:03
what do you guys do?
Riiight
I woke up at 4am, I deserve a nap
@HéctorÁlvarez fair enough, I was battling something or someone in my nightmare
and yesterday, I dreamt that my boss was snorting coke
Was his name Django?
@HéctorÁlvarez I wish
xD
Alright I'm off
smoochies and stuff
13:05
@HéctorÁlvarez cya
13:54
damn MySQL .... i wrote nice little script ... and then they say it's mySQL :(

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