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MS SQL SERVER

How To Receive Data from a Single Table, continued
By: Murach Publishing
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    2006-03-02

    Table of Contents:
  • How To Receive Data from a Single Table, continued
  • How to eliminate duplicate rows
  • How to return a subset of selected rows
  • How to code the WHERE clause
  • How to use the AND, OR, and NOT logical operators
  • How to use the IN operator

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    How To Receive Data from a Single Table, continued - How to return a subset of selected rows


    (Page 3 of 6 )


     
    In addition to eliminating duplicate rows, you can limit the number of rows that are retrieved by a SELECT statement. To do that, you use the TOP clause. Figure 3-9 shows you how.

    You can use the TOP clause in one of two ways. First, you can use it to retrieve a specific number of rows from the beginning, or top, of the result set. To do that, you code the TOP keyword followed by an integer value that specifies the number of rows to be returned. This is illustrated in the first example in this figure. Here, only five rows are returned. Notice that this statement also includes an ORDER BY clause that sorts the rows by the InvoiceTotal column in descending sequence. That way, the invoices with the highest invoice totals will be returned.

    You can also use the TOP clause to retrieve a specific percent of the rows in the result set. To do that, you include the PERCENT keyword as shown in the second example. In this case, the result set includes six rows, which is five percent of the total of 122 rows.

    By default, the TOP clause causes the exact number or percent of rows you specify to be retrieved. However, if additional rows match the values in the last row, you can include those additional rows by including WITH TIES in the TOP clause. This is illustrated in the third example in this figure. Here, the SELECT statement says to retrieve the top five rows from a result set that includes the VendorID and InvoiceDate columns sorted by the InvoiceDate column in descending sequence. As you can see, however, the result set includes six rows instead of five. That’s because WITH TIES is included in the TOP clause, and the columns in the sixth row have the same values as the columns in the fifth row.

    Figure 3-9.  How to return a subset of selected rows

    A SELECT statement with a TOP clause

      SELECT TOP 5 VendorID, InvoiceTotal 
      FROM Invoices
      ORDER BY InvoiceTotal DESC

    A SELECT statement with a TOP clause and the PERCENT keyword

      SELECT TOP 5 PERCENT VendorID,
    InvoiceTotal
      FROM Invoices
      ORDER BY InvoiceTotal DESC

    A SELECT statement with a TOP clause and the WITH TIES keyword

      SELECT TOP 5 WITH TIES VendorID, InvoiceDate
      FROM Invoices
      ORDER BY InvoiceDate DESC

    Description

    • You can use the TOP clause within a SELECT clause to limit the number of rows included in the result set. When you use this clause, the first n  rows that meet the search condition are included, where n  is an integer.
    • If you include PERCENT, the first n  percent of the selected rows are included in the result set.
    • If you include WITH TIES, additional rows will be included if their values match, or tie, the values of the last row.
    • You should include an ORDER BY clause whenever you use the TOP keyword. Otherwise, the rows in the result set will be in no particular sequence.

       

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       · This article is an excerpt from the book "Murach's SQL for SQL Server," published by...
     

    Buy this book now. This article is excerpted from chapter three of the book Murach's SQL for SQL Server, written by Bryan Sylverson (Murach; ISBN: 1890774162). Check it out today at your favorite bookstore. Buy this book now.

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