Re: How to write such a query
От | Thomas Kellerer |
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Тема | Re: How to write such a query |
Дата | |
Msg-id | a441cc0d-6ccd-ab4d-ec3b-871f8065dfac@gmx.net обсуждение исходный текст |
Ответ на | How to write such a query (Igor Korot <ikorot01@gmail.com>) |
Ответы |
Re: How to write such a query
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Список | pgsql-general |
Igor Korot schrieb am 18.09.2020 um 19:29: > [code] > CREATE TABLE X(id INTEGER PRIMARY KEY, field1 char(50), field2 int); > CREATE TABLE Y(id INTEGER PRIMARY KEY, field1 char, field2 double(10, 2)); > SELECT X.field1, Y.field2 from X, Y WHERE X.id = Y.id; > [/code] > > Assuming that the SELECT return 10 rows, I want to update X.field1 > in row 5. There is no such thing as "row 5" in a relational database. Rows in a table have no inherent sort order. The only way you can identify a row, is by the value of its primary (or unique) key. Not by "position". The only way you can identify "row 5" is, if you use an ORDER BY to define a sort order on the result - but that position is only valid for that _result_, it has no meaning for the actual table data. Which brings us back to the fact, that the only way to (uniquely) identify a row in a table is to specify its primary key value in the WHERE clause
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