So what I would like to do is take the values of a table (all of them) insert
them into a new one and when it meets any value that article identifier(sa.art_ident) replace it with the word bighead and the sa.art_moddate be replaced with the current system time. When ever I try to run it it tells me missing right parenthesis... Please help
PROCEDURE p_copier_one IS
BEGIN
INSERT INTO article_new
(
SELECT * FROM article_old sa
CASE
WHEN sa.art_ident='%' THEN
sa.art_ident = 'Bighead'
END
CASE
WHEN sa.art_moddate='%' THEN
sa.art_moddate = to_date(
'02/04/2012'
,'DD/MM/YYYY')
,trunc(SYSDATE)
END
);
END p_copier_one;
Welcome to SO. You would need to do something like shown below. Read my comments inline.
CREATE OR REPLACE PROCEDURE p_copier_one
IS
BEGIN
---List down all your columns here. Although its option to mention your table column but its good practise.
INSERT INTO article_new (
col1,
col2,
col3,
col4,
col5
)
SELECT col1,
col2,
--Put your case here
CASE
WHEN sa.art_ident = '%' THEN 'Bighead'
END col3,
CASE
WHEN sa.art_moddate = '%' THEN TO_DATE('02/04/2012','DD/MM/YYYY')
END col4,
trunc(SYSDATE) col5
FROM article_old sa;
COMMIT;
END;
I have a complex query that creates a master CTE_Table form other CTE_Tables. I want to insert the results of the master CTE_Table into a physical table. I'm using Teradata version 15.10.04.03
SELECT Failed. [3707] Syntax error, expected something like a 'SELECT' keyword or '(' or a 'TRANSACTIONTIME' keyword or a 'VALIDTIME' keyword between ')' and the 'INSERT' keyword.
DROP TABLE dbname.physicalTablename ;
CREATE MULTISET TABLE dbname.physicalTablename ,
NO FALLBACK ,
NO BEFORE JOURNAL,
NO AFTER JOURNAL,
CHECKSUM = DEFAULT,
DEFAULT MERGEBLOCKRATIO
(
col1 INTEGER,
col2 INTEGER,
col3 INTEGER
)
NO PRIMARY INDEX ;
WITH
cteTable3 AS
( SELECT A.colA, A.colB, A.colC, B.col1, B.col2, B.col3
FROM cteTable1 A INNER JOIN cteTable2 ON (blah blah blah) ),
cteTable2 AS
( SELECT col1, col2, col3 FROM SourceTableB ),
cteTable1 AS
( SELECT colA, colB, colC FROM SourceTableA )
INSERT INTO dbname.physicalTablename
( col1, col2, col3, col4, col5, col6 )
SELECT
(C3.colA, C3.colB, C3.colC, C3.col1, C3.col2, C3.col3)
FROM cteTable3 C3 ;
While you are missing the INSERT portion of the question, I think the following might clear things up. The correct format for using a CTE in an INSERT is:
INSERT INTO <tablename>
WITH <cte> AS (SELECT...)
SELECT <fields> FROM <cte>
Consider the following:
CREATE MULTISET VOLATILE TABLE tmp AS (SELECT 'bobby' as firstname) WITH DATA ON COMMIT PRESERVE ROWS;
INSERT INTO tmp
WITH cte AS (select 'carol' as firstname)
SELECT * FROM cte;
SELECT * FROM tmp;
DROP TABLE tmp;
I have 2 different tables and I want to delete records from table1 which does not exist in Tables2
Table1:
select col1 from Table1
Table2:
select
concat('A_',col1)
from
Table2
where
Col2 = '748'
and Col3 = 'D'
and Col4 = 'Account'
now I want to delete the difference from Table1...
This can be done using the minus operation, and an insert into statement.
insert into table3(col) (
select col1 from Table1
minus
select
concat('A_',col1)
from
Table2
where
Col2 = '748'
and Col3 = 'D'
and Col4 = 'Account'
)
Records can then be deleted from table1 using a delete statement like
delete from table1
where col1 in (
select col1 from Table1
minus
select
concat('A_',col1)
from
Table2
where
Col2 = '748'
and Col3 = 'D'
and Col4 = 'Account'
)
delete from table1 t1
where not exists ( select * from table2 where col2 || col3 || col4 = t1.col1 );
This will work EXCEPT for the following situation; you need to explain what you want in that case. The DELETE statement can be modified to accommodate.
If t1.col1 is NULL, it will be deleted even if there are rows in table2 where col2, col3 and col4 are all NULL. Is that situation possible (where t1.col1 and col2, col3, col4 in table2 are all NULL? In that case, should the row in t1 be kept rather than deleted?
I just recently found out that subqueries are not allowed in INSERT statements that are inside stored procedures. This is my script:
begin
execute immediate 'truncate table itcustadm.GL_DTPJ_TEST2';
insert into GL_DTPJ_TEST2
(rule_no,
posted_by_user_id,
transaction_id,
transaction_sr_no,
dr_amount,
cr_amount,
tran_crncy_code,
bkdt_tran_flg,
bank_desc
)
select
tq.rule_no,
tq.posted_by_user_id,
tq.transaction_id,
tq.transaction_sr_no,
tq.dr_amount,
tq.cr_amount,
tq.tran_crncy_code,
tq.bkdt_tran_flg,
(select ent.bank_desc from crmuser.end ent where ent.bank_id = gam.bank_id);
But since the (select ent.bank_desc from crmuser.end ent where ent.bank_id = gam.bank_id) at the bottom of the SELECT statement is not allowed by Oracle, what's the best way to accomplish this?
I actually have this code right before the INSERT statement, but I don't know how to exactly use it:
get_bank_desc := '(select ent.bank_desc from crmuser.end ent ' ||
'where ent.bank_id = gam.bank_id)';
I am not sure what you are exactly trying for, but below code may be useful for you, you can achieve inserting a SubQuery output into a table using below query sample, but make sure output of the SubQuery is a single row o/p, so that you can escape from "ORA-01427: single-row SubQuery returns more than one row" ERROR.
insert into test_ins1
values(1,(SELECT COL2 FROM TEST_INS WHERE COL1=1 ));
Even then you can use rownum in where condition and take the single value.
Please let me know in case of any doubts
declare
bank_desc_temp bank_desk_type; /* the type defined in crmuser.ent for bank_desc*/
begin
select ent.bank_desc into bank_desc_temp from crmuser.end ent where ent.bank_id = gam.bank_id;
execute immediate 'truncate table itcustadm.GL_DTPJ_TEST2';
insert into GL_DTPJ_TEST2
(rule_no,
posted_by_user_id,
transaction_id,
transaction_sr_no,
dr_amount,
cr_amount,
tran_crncy_code,
bkdt_tran_flg,
bank_desc
)
select
tq.rule_no,
tq.posted_by_user_id,
tq.transaction_id,
tq.transaction_sr_no,
tq.dr_amount,
tq.cr_amount,
tq.tran_crncy_code,
tq.bkdt_tran_flg,
bank_desc_temp;
end;
When you say "not allowed" what do you mean? Did you get an error?
I ask, because subqueries are definitely allowed inside an insert as select statement, providing you have the syntax correct (and the subquery returns at most one row), e.g.:
create table test_tab (col1 number, col2 varchar2(10));
begin
insert into test_tab
select 1,
(select 'Yes' from dual d2 where d.dummy = d2.dummy)
from dual d;
commit;
end;
/
select * from test_tab;
COL1 COL2
---------- ----------
1 Yes
There are some syntax issues with the code you provided - where is the from clause, and where are the tq and gam aliases defined?
There are two syntax you can use in your insert statement:
(I)
INSERT INTO table_name( column1, column2....columnN)
VALUES ( value1, value2....valueN);
(II)
INSERT INTO table (column1, column2, ... )
SELECT expression1, expression2, ...
FROM source_table(s)
WHERE conditions;
In your example, you should choose the second approach:
insert into GL_DTPJ_TEST2 (rule_no,
posted_by_user_id,
transaction_id,
transaction_sr_no,
dr_amount,
cr_amount,
tran_crncy_code,
bkdt_tran_flg,
bank_desc
)
select tq.rule_no,
tq.posted_by_user_id,
tq.transaction_id,
tq.transaction_sr_no,
tq.dr_amount,
tq.cr_amount,
tq.tran_crncy_code,
tq.bkdt_tran_flg,
ent.bank_desc
from crmuser.gam
join crmuser.end ent
on ent.bank_id = gam.bank_id
;
basically, if you want to add records using an insert statement, you should use a full select statement first. Here is how I would do it:
(1)
select *
from table1;
(2)
select column1
,column2
,column3
from table1;
(3)
select t1.column1
,t1.column2
,t1.column3
,t2.column4
,t2.column5
from table1 t1
join table2 t2
on t2.id = t1.id
;
(4)
insert into table3 (col1
,col2
,col3
,col4
,col5)
select t1.column1
,t1.column2
,t1.column3
,t2.column4
,t2.column5
from table1 t1
join table2 t2
on t2.id = t1.id
;
How do I go about replacing the following self join using analytics:
SELECT
t1.col1 col1,
t1.col2 col2,
SUM((extract(hour FROM (t1.times_stamp - t2.times_stamp)) * 3600 + extract(minute FROM ( t1.times_stamp - t2.times_stamp)) * 60 + extract(second FROM ( t1.times_stamp - t2.times_stamp)) ) ) div,
COUNT(*) tot_count
FROM tab1 t1,
tab1 t2
WHERE t2.col1 = t1.col1
AND t2.col2 = t1.col2
AND t2.col3 = t1.sequence_num
AND t2.times_stamp < t1.times_stamp
AND t2.col4 = 3
AND t1.col4 = 4
AND t2.col5 NOT IN(103,123)
AND t1.col5 != 549
GROUP BY t1.col1, t1.col2
I'm pretty sure you won't be able to replace the self-join with analytics because you are using inter-rows operations (t1.time_stamp - t2.time_stamp). Analytics can only access the values of the current row and the value of aggregate functions over a subset of rows (windowing clause).
See this article from Tom Kyte and this paper for further analysis of the limitations of analytics.
It almost looks like you could eliminate the self join on t2 and replace
t1.time_stamp - t2.time_stamp
with something like
t1.time_stamp - lag(t1.time_stamp) over (partition by col1, col2 order by time_stamp)
The different filters on t1 and t2 on col4 and col5 are what prevents you from doing this.
Analytic functions are applied after the where / group by on the main query, so you'd need to have a single filter on t1 in order to use lag/lead to specify following or preceding rows in a sequence.
Also, you'd need to push the sum/group by to an outer query to aggregate after the analytic function:
select col1, col2, sum(timestamp_diff) from (
select col1, col2, timestamp - lag(timestamp) over(.....) as timestamp_diff
where ....
) group by col1, col2