SQL UPDATE Example
The "Persons" table:
| P_Id | LastName | FirstName | Address | City |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Hansen | Ola | Timoteivn 10 | Sandnes |
| 2 | Svendson | Tove | Borgvn 23 | Sandnes |
| 3 | Pettersen | Kari | Storgt 20 | Stavanger |
| 4 | Nilsen | Johan | Bakken 2 | Stavanger |
| 5 | Tjessem | Jakob |
Now we want to update the person "Tjessem, Jakob" in the "Persons" table.
We use the following SQL statement:
UPDATE Persons
SET Address='Nissestien 67', City='Sandnes'
WHERE LastName='Tjessem' AND FirstName='Jakob'
SET Address='Nissestien 67', City='Sandnes'
WHERE LastName='Tjessem' AND FirstName='Jakob'
The "Persons" table will now look like this:
| P_Id | LastName | FirstName | Address | City |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Hansen | Ola | Timoteivn 10 | Sandnes |
| 2 | Svendson | Tove | Borgvn 23 | Sandnes |
| 3 | Pettersen | Kari | Storgt 20 | Stavanger |
| 4 | Nilsen | Johan | Bakken 2 | Stavanger |
| 5 | Tjessem | Jakob | Nissestien 67 | Sandnes |
SQL UPDATE Warning
Be careful when updating records. If we had omitted the WHERE clause in the example above, like this:
UPDATE Persons
SET Address='Nissestien 67', City='Sandnes'
SET Address='Nissestien 67', City='Sandnes'
The "Persons" table would have looked like this:
| P_Id | LastName | FirstName | Address | City |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Hansen | Ola | Nissestien 67 | Sandnes |
| 2 | Svendson | Tove | Nissestien 67 | Sandnes |
| 3 | Pettersen | Kari | Nissestien 67 | Sandnes |
| 4 | Nilsen | Johan | Nissestien 67 | Sandnes |
| 5 | Tjessem | Jakob | Nissestien 67 | Sandnes |
No comments:
Post a Comment