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12:29
@Someguywhocodes so you escaped it twice before inserting it?
13:23
Hey, can I get a critique or pointers on my sql? data.stackexchange.com/stackoverflow/query/edit/337492
14:11
@AaronHall Seems pretty reasonable. It won't scale without a fulltext index on location, though.
Also I'd recommend adding table identifiers to every column reference in your query for readability - I have to guess at what table contains the Location column
That's the kind of feedback I'm looking for - so won't scale?
You won't be able to use traditional b-tree indexes to find rows matching '%queens%'
yeah, add identifiers so readers won't have to guess, I thought of that, but wanted to get feedback on it before tweaking.
what do you mean?
> You won't be able to use traditional b-tree indexes to find rows matching '%queens%'
I'm about to post it on codereview
care to go for some rep there? :)
14:15
nah, thanks though :-)
 
1 hour later…
15:35
hi...i have a question : how to insert a row using other tables columns ??... i tried this but nothing happened ... : INSERT INTO table_a(_id, column_a_1) VALUES ('1', (SELECT table_b.column_b_1 FROM table_b WHERE table_b.user_name = table_a.user_name );
:( ... any help!
Can I post a link to the code review question?
i don't have any problem with that... :)
1
Q: StackExchange DataExplorer (SEDE), Top Python badged users from NYC

Aaron HallI forked this query from another one, and made it a bit more complex. I'm looking for feedback on my style, as well as answers to other questions (see below). -- top users: NYC -- forked from Avinash Raj's query for Chennai select row_number() over(order by u.Reputation desc) as [#], u....

@AaronHall u can't solve my problem?
I have never done inserts
15:42
:( ... thanks
sounds scary
inserting?
@AaronHall That "Would this sql work with all relational DB's that accept SQL" question is a bit over-broad
the answer is "almost certainly not" because different SQL implementations vary to a depressing degree
Worse, even if they all parsed and returned the same results, different engines could perform very differently based on variations
Yeah, I figured something like that would be the case, maybe some subset?
15:57
In my experience, the only databases you can legitimately say that you target are the ones that you test against.
Deciding to target any new databases with an existing application will always take some work, and a lot of testing. If you think that might happen eventually, you should try to learn which features of your chosen database are unique to it, and avoid using those.
...
@TehShrike thanks... another question i have: ... i have a table with _id column... and it automatically increase on inserting.... but when i delete from it(for example row number 2) this column now has not 2 in it... it's like this : 1-3-4-... so how can i make it like this : 1-2-3-... ??? excuse me for my bad english..
@lord.h you want the gap to stay there. It's important that your records have a primary key that never changes so that you can refer to it from any other place in your application and never have to update those references.
@TehShrike thanks...
16:30
@TehShrike Surely there's a universal subset of SQL though, right?
Some sort of standard?
17:12
@AaronHall that every database implements? I doubt it.
There are plenty of servers that only implement part of the standard
I find it hard to believe there's an sql that would fail on e.g.
SELECT *
 FROM  Book
 WHERE price > 100.00
 ORDER BY title;
if you add enough qualifiers to the question, I'd concede that
I'll bet that would execute on MSSQL, MySQL, PostgreSQL, SQLite
but if you're talking about "all SQL database implementations" then I wouldn't even be confident about that query
Yeah, you'd have to have some sane qualifier like, "excluding half-baked implementations written by barely passing CS students"
17:15
but you probably wouldn't be safe with the qualifier "used in production at a business somewhere" :-P
I'll give you that too.
>SQL Features That SQLite Does Not Implement

> SQLite implements most of the common features of SQL. Rather than try to list all the features of SQL that SQLite does support, it is much easier to list those that it does not. Unsupported features of SQL are shown below.
yeah, every rdbms has a list like that
unlike sqlite, most of them don't list them up-front in a handy manner
and in a lot of cases it's "well, we have that, but the syntax is different"
and/or "we have that, but only in these cases"
>RIGHT and FULL OUTER JOIN
Complete ALTER TABLE support
Complete trigger support
Writing to VIEWs
GRANT and REVOKE
well that stinks
This is confusing to noobs (I know because I'm close to one) because they don't indent the join part:
SELECT Book.title AS Title,
       count(*) AS Authors
 FROM  Book
 JOIN  Book_author
   ON  Book.isbn = Book_author.isbn
 GROUP BY Book.title;
also, for your example "simple" query up there: which rdbms would use an index on price to perform that query? At 10k rows? at 10m rows?
so by index, do you mean a pre-sorted table by price?
17:26
I mean, which rdbms would do a full table scan, and which would be able to use a b-tree index to only look up/fetch the rows with a price greater than 100.00
I was very frustrated by some range lookups I was trying to do with MySQL. Queries took forever. I pulled the same dataset into Postgresql with the same columns indexed, and they were near-instantaneous
the more you think about what the B in B-trees means, the better you understand B-trees.
heehee
 
2 hours later…
19:58
@TehShrike Yes, the data was double escaped by a plugin outside of our code-base, the devs are fixing it now - yay for open source

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