Search Results

Search found 31421 results on 1257 pages for 'entity sql'.

Page 595/1257 | < Previous Page | 591 592 593 594 595 596 597 598 599 600 601 602  | Next Page >

  • Undo Table Updates

    - by sikas
    I updated a table in my MS SQL Server 2008 by accident, I was updating a table from another by copying cell by cell, but I have overwritten the original table. Is there a way that I can restore my table contents as it was?

    Read the article

  • Android - getting data from a server

    - by jonhobbs
    I've read lots about using local storage for android but how would I connect to an SQL database online to send and get data? For example, if I was making a game and wanted to create a worldwide high score table, how would I store that online and make sure it was only available to that app? Thanks, Jon

    Read the article

  • Different cache concurrent strategies for root entity and its collection (Hibernate with EHCache)?

    - by grigory
    Given example from Hibernate docs and modifying it so that root level entity (Customer) is read-only while one of its collections (tickets) is read-write: @Entity @Cache(usage = CacheConcurrencyStrategy.READ_ONLY) public class Customer { ... @OneToMany(...) @Cache(usage = CacheConcurrencyStrategy.READ_WRITE) public SortedSet<Ticket> getTickets() { return tickets; } ... } Would collection of tickets get refreshed when accessing customer from cache?

    Read the article

  • Comma Separated values in Oracle

    - by Vabs
    I have a column with comma separated values like 6,7,99.3334. I need write a PL SQL procedure that will give me these values separately. The Length of the column is 40. Can anyone help me with this?

    Read the article

  • Need some sort of "conditional grouping" in MySQL.

    - by serg555
    I have Article table: id | type | date ----------------------- 1 | A | 2010-01-01 2 | A | 2010-01-01 3 | B | 2010-01-01 Field type can be A, B or C. I need to run a report that would return how many articles of each type there is per every day, like this: date | count(type="A") | count(type="B") | count(type="C") ----------------------------------------------------- 2010-01-01 | 2 | 1 | 0 2010-01-02 | 5 | 6 | 7 Currently I am running 3 queries for every type and then manually merging the results select date, count(id) from article where type="A" group by date Is it possible to do this in one query? (in pure sql, no stored procedures or anything like that). Thanks

    Read the article

  • Using a wildcard in an update?

    - by Paul Tomblin
    I want to go through a table, and change all instances of 'notify4-N' to 'notify5-N', where N is a number from 1-9. Is there a way to do that in SQL? It would be easy in perl, but I'm not sure the customer even has perl on his servers.

    Read the article

  • Oracle join query

    - by Jasim
    There are three tables in my db ITEM_MASTER, PRICE_MASTER, COMP_MASTER ITEM_MASTER STORE_CODE ITEM_CODE ITEM_DESC 011 914004 desccc PRICE_MASTER STORE_CODE ITEM_CODE COMP_CODE 011 914004 01 011 914004 02 011 914004 03 011 914004 04 COMP_MASTER COMP_CODE COMP_DESC STORE_CODE 01 comp1 011 02 comp2 011 03 comp3 011 04 comp4 011 I want to get all these for an ITEM_CODE in single query STORE_CODE ITEM_CODE ITEM_DESC COMP_DESC1 COMP_DESC2 COMP_DESC3 COMP_DESC4 011 914004 desccc comp1 comp2 comp3 comp4 How can i write a oracle SQL query for this??

    Read the article

  • SQLite3 Integer Max Value

    - by peterwkc
    Hello to all, what is the maximum value of data type INTEGER in sqlite3 ? How do you store ip address in database ? What is attached ? How to create table which belongs to a specific database using sql ddl? What is this error about ? error while the list of system catalogue : no such table: temp.sqlite_master Unable to execute statement Does sqlite3 text data type supoports unicode? Thanks.

    Read the article

  • MSSQL 2005: Update rows in a specified order (like ORDER BY)?

    - by JMTyler
    I want to update rows of a table in a specific order, like one would expect if including an ORDER BY clause, but MS SQL does not support the ORDER BY clause in UPDATE queries. I have checked out this question which supplied a nice solution, but my query is a bit more complicated than the one specified there. UPDATE TableA AS Parent SET Parent.ColA = Parent.ColA + (SELECT TOP 1 Child.ColA FROM TableA AS Child WHERE Child.ParentColB = Parent.ColB ORDER BY Child.Priority) ORDER BY Parent.Depth DESC; So, what I'm hoping that you'll notice is that a single table (TableA) contains a hierarchy of rows, wherein one row can be the parent or child of any other row. The rows need to be updated in order from the deepest child up to the root parent. This is because TableA.ColA must contain an up-to-date concatenation of its own current value with the values of its children (I realize this query only concats with one child, but that is for the sake of simplicity - the purpose of the example in this question does not necessitate any more verbosity), therefore the query must update from the bottom up. The solution suggested in the question I noted above is as follows: UPDATE messages SET status=10 WHERE ID in (SELECT TOP (10) Id FROM Table WHERE status=0 ORDER BY priority DESC ); The reason that I don't think I can use this solution is because I am referencing column values from the parent table inside my subquery (see WHERE Child.ParentColB = Parent.ColB), and I don't think two sibling subqueries would have access to each others' data. So far I have only determined one way to merge that suggested solution with my current problem, and I don't think it works. UPDATE TableA AS Parent SET Parent.ColA = Parent.ColA + (SELECT TOP 1 Child.ColA FROM TableA AS Child WHERE Child.ParentColB = Parent.ColB ORDER BY Child.Priority) WHERE Parent.Id IN (SELECT Id FROM TableA ORDER BY Parent.Depth DESC); The WHERE..IN subquery will not actually return a subset of the rows, it will just return the full list of IDs in the order that I want. However (I don't know for sure - please tell me if I'm wrong) I think that the WHERE..IN clause will not care about the order of IDs within the parentheses - it will just check the ID of the row it currently wants to update to see if it's in that list (which, they all are) in whatever order it is already trying to update... Which would just be a total waste of cycles, because it wouldn't change anything. So, in conclusion, I have looked around and can't seem to figure out a way to update in a specified order (and included the reason I need to update in that order, because I am sure I would otherwise get the ever-so-useful "why?" answers) and I am now hitting up Stack Overflow to see if any of you gurus out there who know more about SQL than I do (which isn't saying much) know of an efficient way to do this. It's particularly important that I only use a single query to complete this action. A long question, but I wanted to cover my bases and give you guys as much info to feed off of as possible. :) Any thoughts?

    Read the article

  • Fastest and stable non-sql database?

    - by Pavel
    What is the fastest and most stable non-sql database to store big data and process thousands requests during the day (it's for traffic exchange service)? I've found Kdb+ and Berkeley DB. Are they good? Are there other options?

    Read the article

  • Position of object in database

    - by fl00r
    Hi! I have got model Team and I've got (i.e.) team = Team.first :offset => 20. Now I need to get number of position of my team in db table. I can do it in ruby: Team.all.index team #=> 20 But I am sure that I can write it on SQL and it will be less expensive for me with big tables.

    Read the article

  • MySQL float values jumping around on insert?

    - by dubayou
    So i have a SQL table setup as such CREATE TABLE IF NOT EXISTS `points` ( `id` int(11) NOT NULL auto_increment, `lat` float(10,6) NOT NULL, `lng` float(10,6) NOT NULL, PRIMARY KEY (`id`) ) ENGINE=MyISAM; And im inserting stuff like INSERT INTO `points` (`lat`, `lng`) VALUES ('89.123456','-12.123456'); Gives me a row with lat and lng being 89.123459 and -12.123455 Whats up?

    Read the article

  • mysql procedure to update numeric reference in previous rows when one is updated

    - by markcial
    There's a table like this one ______________________ | id | title | order | |----------------------| | 1 | test1 | 1 | |-----|--------|-------| | 2 | test2 | 2 | |-----|--------|-------| | 3 | test3 | 3 | |-----|--------|-------| | 4 | test4 | 4 | '----------------------' when i introduce in my mysql shell a single update to a row $sql UPDATE `table` SET order=1 WHERE id=3; And then procedure or method resamples order column in the before update lower values to get its order renewed like this ______________________ | id | title | order | |----------------------| | 1 | test1 | 2 | |-----|--------|-------| | 2 | test2 | 3 | |-----|--------|-------| | 3 | test3 | 1 | |-----|--------|-------| | 4 | test4 | 4 | '----------------------' Any help would be appreciated, thanks!

    Read the article

  • How can I use "FOR UPDATE" with a JOIN on Oracle?

    - by tangens
    The answer to another SO question was to use this SQL query: SELECT o.Id, o.attrib1, o.attrib2 FROM table1 o JOIN ( SELECT DISTINCT Id FROM table1, table2, table3 WHERE ... ) T1 ON o.id = T1.Id Now I wonder how I can use this statement together with the keyword FOR UPDATE. If I simply append it to the query, Oracle will tell me: ORA-02014: cannot select FOR UPDATE from view Do I have to modify the query or is there a trick to do this with Oracle? With MySql the statement works fine.

    Read the article

< Previous Page | 591 592 593 594 595 596 597 598 599 600 601 602  | Next Page >