SQL SERVER – Tips from the SQL Joes 2 Pros Development Series – Efficient Query Writing Strategy – Day 4 of 35

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Query Writing Strategy

Some people may push back on this next technique or misunderstand until getting to the very end. The goal is to have fewer errors as you write complex queries more quickly by making sure the easy stuff works first.

If you are a SQL expert who only works on the same database for the rest of your life who will never type the wrong field name in a query then yes you are the fastest query writer your company could ever have. Let’s face it, sometime we as SQL experts need to get familiar with our underlying data before we get great coding velocity. Brute force or memorized keystroke solutions can be fun when learning but not good when you have a deadline and want to write queries quickly, with fewer errors, and test things as you continue to write more code. With that in mind here is something I have yet to find in any book. When enthusiastic SQL students do this, they experience a revelation. The number of errors drops significantly and the speed at writing complex queries increases immediately.

Knowing how to narrow down what you are looking for amongst a vast list of choices helps immensely. Grabbing the right tables first and then the fields second is much like grabbing the right menu before ordering an item from it. In fact, one student named Tim took this back to his team of SQL developers and they immediately implemented this process.

We are all used to following steps we know have proven to work. Most of the time, actions are sequential from top to bottom or left to right. Other times we complete things in phases. The two phases you are going to see here apply to joining tables or any other query that has plenty of logic. Just remember to organize first and clean up (or itemize) second.

When you go to a new restaurant, you ask to see the menu. You want to see all they have to offer. The odds are you may like half the items, but only need a few for to feed your family. Looking at the menu is like starting off with a SELECT *. After looking at all the fields, you pick the one(s) you want.

Sometimes restaurants have multiple menus. My favorite restaurant has a kids’ menu, an adult menu, a “gluten-free” menu and a drink menu. These menus were gathered at our station. Ultimately, in my head, a selection was narrowed to what our group needed.

Phase I:  Organize. When you’re building a new query from many tables, you’ll find yourself wondering, “Where do I start?” Really there are three steps to this phase.  First, lay the steps out by identifying which tables contain the essential data. Second, get all your joins working with a SELECT * statement. Third, add any basic filtering criteria.

Phase II.  Itemize. Once all joins and criteria, such as SELECT *, FROM and WHERE are working, you are ready for Phase II. This entails going back and changing your SELECT * to an itemized select field list as your final step.

Let’s explore how this two-phase process of “Organize then Itemize” is a time-saver. We are going to use one of the challenges from the last lab. In Lab 3.2 (Outer Joins) in Skill Check 2, you needed to get four fields from two different tables. If you list all four desired fields and test one table at time, you get an error as seen on the right side of Figure 4.1.

In Figure 4.1 we write the SELECT statement and part of the FROM clause. The FROM clause will have two tables when we are done, but for now we just want to get the Location table working. When we use the SELECT * it removes any possible errors from line 1. From there, we can focus on our more complicated join logic. We can add tables one at a time until all is working. This is the Organize phase.

SQL SERVER - Tips from the SQL Joes 2 Pros Development Series - Efficient Query Writing Strategy - Day 4 of 35 j2p_4_1

SELECT * never results in an “invalid column name” error, but a SELECT list can. After your query is organized and working, you can go back and itemize the SELECT field list to display just what you want. This is the Itemize phase. These steps are broken down as follows:

--ORGANIZE PHASE: Get SELECT * query written.
-- Test first table logic
SELECT *
FROM Location
--Test second table with join
SELECT *
FROM Location INNER JOIN Employee
ON Location.LocationID = Employee.LocationID
--Test all tables with criteria
SELECT *
FROM Location INNER JOIN Employee
ON Location.LocationID = Employee.LocationID
WHERE [State] = 'WA'
--ITEMIZE PHASE: Change to SELECT field list
--Choose your fields
SELECT FirstName, LastName, City, [State] FROM Location INNER JOIN Employee
ON Location.LocationID = Employee.LocationID
WHERE [State] = 'WA'

SELECT is always the first statement in a query. It’s natural to want to finish your SELECT statement before writing the FROM clause. Start with SELECT * and finish the query. Do your field list when all else is done. Use this method and you will never again get a field selection error while building queries.

Note: If you want to setup the sample JProCo database on your system you can watch this video.

Question 4

Q. 4) Square brackets are required when…

  1. The table name conflicts with a keyword
  2. The table name is the same as another table.
  3. The table uses the same name as the database.
  4. To alias the table.

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Reference:  Pinal Dave (https://blog.sqlauthority.com)

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204 Comments. Leave new

  • Dinesh Khatroja
    August 4, 2011 9:15 am

    1. The table name conflicts with a keyword

    Ex.
    Suppose,We Have EmpMast Table in EMP Database Where Date Represents BirthDate Of Employee And Hear Date is Keyword. So We Have Required Square Bracket ..Hear

    Select Emp_Code,Name,[DATE] BirthDate From EmpMast Where Selected=1

    Reply
  • Option 1 for keywords, but there actually seems to be two classes of keywords, and some require the brackets and others don’t. Texas, USA. Thanks for doing this Pinal – hope it helps some people out.

    Reply
  • Answer : Square brackets are required when…

    1.The table name conflicts with a keyword.

    Thanks,
    Pawan
    India

    Reply
  • The answer is

    1.The table name conflicts with a keyword

    thats why square brackets are required.

    country : India [Ahemdabad]

    Reply
  • It helps a lot:)

    Reply
  • Ans: The table name conflicts with a keyword

    Pratik Raval
    India

    Reply
  • Correct Answer is: Option 1

    “The table name conflicts with a keyword”

    Dips,
    INDIA[Noida]

    Reply
  • Hi Pinal,

    The correct answer is option 1.

    Square brackets are required when the table name conflicts with a keyword.

    Divya
    USA

    Reply
  • “The table name conflicts with a keyword”

    Option 1 is correct answer.

    Ramesh(Chennai-India)

    Reply
  • Option 1 is correct.
    When table name conflicts with the keyword

    Reply
  • OPtion 1. Table name is same as some keword such as date / name/ etc..

    Name mayur mehta,india

    Reply
  • Option 1.The table name conflicts with a keyword

    Hyderabad, India

    Reply
  • Correct Answer is 1.
    1. The table name conflicts with a keyword

    In another case when column name is having space then also we need mention square braces

    Reply
  • Ans is :1

    Table Name conflicts with a keyword

    Alok Kumar

    New Delhi [India ]

    Reply
  • Ans is : 1

    If we use any reserved keyword than it will confuse the query execution engine. When square brackets are put around it, it will go for user created tables.

    Gandhinagar,
    India

    Reply
  • Dhruval Vikram Shah
    August 4, 2011 10:24 am

    Correnct Answer is : Option 1

    The table name conflicts with a keyword

    Thanks
    Dhruval Shah, India.

    Reply
  • Rajneesh Verma
    August 4, 2011 10:26 am

    Answer 1 is correct.
    “The table name conflicts with a keyword”

    Reply
  • Option 1 is Correct

    The table name conflicts with a keyword

    INDIA

    Reply
  • Shirish Kulkarni
    August 4, 2011 10:31 am

    Correct answer is 1. The table name conflicts with a keyword

    Explanation : It is necessary when table name Contains Space. For example “Dept Managers”.
    Or table name is built in SQL server Function/ Keyword.

    INDIA

    Reply
  • Alok Chandra Shahi
    August 4, 2011 10:32 am

    Answer is

    1. The table name conflicts with a keyword

    Alok Chandra Shahi
    India

    Reply

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