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The weather class can be queried with normal relational selection and projection queries. A SQL select statement is used to do this. The statement is divided into a target list (the part that lists the attributes to be returned) and a qualification (the part that specifies any restrictions). For example, to retrieve all the rows of weather, type:
SELECT * FROM WEATHER;and the output should be:
+--------------+---------+---------+------+------------+ |city | temp_lo | temp_hi | prcp | date | +--------------+---------+---------+------+------------+ |San Francisco | 46 | 50 | 0.25 | 11-27-1994 | +--------------+---------+---------+------+------------+ |San Francisco | 43 | 57 | 0 | 11-29-1994 | +--------------+---------+---------+------+------------+ |Hayward | 37 | 54 | | 11-29-1994 | +--------------+---------+---------+------+------------+You may specify any arbitrary expressions in the target list. For example, you can do:
SELECT city, (temp_hi+temp_lo)/2 AS temp_avg, date FROM weather;
Arbitrary Boolean operators (and, or and not) are allowed in the qualification of any query. For example,
SELECT * FROM weather WHERE city = 'San Francisco' AND prcp > 0.0; +--------------+---------+---------+------+------------+ |city | temp_lo | temp_hi | prcp | date | +--------------+---------+---------+------+------------+ |San Francisco | 46 | 50 | 0.25 | 11-27-1994 | +--------------+---------+---------+------+------------+
As a final note, you can specify that the results of a select can be returned in a sorted order or with duplicate instances removed.
SELECT DISTINCT city FROM weather ORDER BY city;
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Populating a Class with Instances | Up | Redirecting SELECT Queries |