Default where with order by clause

Hi all
How to use Default where with order by clause
for example i want to use Default_where clause with order by clause
Regards
Shahzaib ismail

Hi,
I have a similar query for where clause.
my query-find form is a multi record form like below:
Criteria - Condition - Value
Item/Category/Planner (List_Item) - Equals/Among (List_Item) - text_FIELD
Item - Equals - ITEM_1
Category - Among - ('CAT1', 'CAT2')
Planner - Equals - PL1
Find_BUTTON Clear_BUTTON
User can select any criteria and condition combination and then enter the value in "Value" text field.
My query is: how can I prepare a where clause based on user input since the user can enter any number of values/combinations? I guess I would have to use some looping to generate where clause.
Thanks
Imran

Similar Messages

  • Query with order by clause

    Hi,
    I found a query with order by clause in procedure which is taking long time.
    Stats are upto date.
    Total Rows :650000.
    It is ordered by primary key column.
    select * from table_name order by col1;
    col1 is a primary key.No of cpu's used is 4.
    can anyone suggest me a better solution to improve the performance of a query.
    Is it better to use parallel hint for above scenario.
    Any help really apprecaited.
    Thanks in advance.

    Hi,
    Thanks for ur immediate reply.
    It doesn't have where clause.
    below is the plan
    SQL> select * from table(dbms_xplan.display);
    PLAN_TABLE_OUTPUT
    Plan hash value: 619071987
    | Id  | Operation                   | Name                 | Rows  | Bytes | Cos
    |   0 | SELECT STATEMENT            |                      |   671K|   255M| 125
    |   1 |  TABLE ACCESS BY INDEX ROWID| FULL_ITEM_FACILITIES |   671K|   255M| 125
    |   2 |   INDEX FULL SCAN           | FIF_PK               |   671K|       |
    9 rows selected
    Executed in 0.094 secondsThanks in advance
    Edited by: unique on Jun 22, 2009 8:26 AM

  • Problem with order by clause

    Hai all,
    I have problem with order by clause,
    My query is
    "select number from table1 order by number asc "
    and the output is displaying as
    1
    10
    12
    13
    15
    17
    19
    2
    20
    21
    22
    But if we give order by it should display as below only right ?
    1
    2
    10
    12
    13
    15
    17
    19
    20
    21
    22 ........
    Please help me why it is not displaying like it. and how to make the statement to display like the second case. Thanks in advance.
    Regards,
    Uraja

    The column datatype that you are selecting is not of NUMBER datatype(might be char or varchar2) hence you are getting such result set.
    And for this purpose, it is recommended to set datatype of a column appropriately.
    For now you can add TO_NUMBER function to column in ORDER BY clause, only if it has data of number type.
    Edited by: Ora on 19 Nov, 2012 3:10 AM

  • Long run time with ORDER by clause

    Hi,
    I am having a query which is executing fine(in 2 mins) but when i am using order by clause in it, its taking around 13 mins.
    Can anyone suggest what could be th reason and how to execute the same query are get the ordered record?
    thanks.

    Sorry for not providing complet details.
    Database version id 10g.
    Below is the execution plan when using with order by clause.
    Execution Plan
    | Id  | Operation                              | Name              | Rows  | Bytes | Cost  |
    |   0 | SELECT STATEMENT                       |                   |     1 |   118 |  1538 |
    |   1 |  FILTER                                |                   |       |       |       |
    |   2 |   HASH JOIN                            |                   | 16657 |  1089K|    56 |
    |   3 |    TABLE ACCESS FULL                   | FILETYP           |     6 |    60 |     3 |
    |   4 |    TABLE ACCESS FULL                   | FILETYPSOURCEID   | 16657 |   927K|    52 |
    |   5 |   NESTED LOOPS                         |                   |     1 |    35 |     3 |
    |   6 |    TABLE ACCESS BY INDEX ROWID         | FILEWAREHOUSE     |     1 |    25 |     2 |
    |   7 |     INDEX RANGE SCAN                   | FILEWAREHOUSE_DX2 |     1 |       |     2 |
    |   8 |    TABLE ACCESS BY INDEX ROWID         | EXTFILE           |     1 |    10 |     1 |
    |   9 |     INDEX UNIQUE SCAN                  | PK_EXTFILE        |     1 |       |     1 |
    |  10 |  SORT ORDER BY                         |                   |     1 |   118 |  1538 |
    |  11 |   NESTED LOOPS                         |                   |     1 |   118 |  1534 |
    |  12 |    NESTED LOOPS OUTER                  |                   |     1 |   100 |  1533 |
    |  13 |     NESTED LOOPS OUTER                 |                   |     1 |    96 |  1532 |
    |  14 |      NESTED LOOPS                      |                   |     1 |    88 |  1531 |
    |  15 |       HASH JOIN                        |                   |     5 |   360 |  1524 |
    |  16 |        TABLE ACCESS BY INDEX ROWID     | RTXN              |     1 |    22 |     1 |
    |  17 |         NESTED LOOPS                   |                   |   117 |  5148 |  1518 |
    |  18 |          VIEW                          | VW_SQ_1           | 20869 |   448K|  1441 |
    |  19 |           HASH GROUP BY                |                   | 20869 |   427K|  1441 |
    |  20 |            FILTER                      |                   |       |       |       |
    |  21 |             TABLE ACCESS BY INDEX ROWID| RTXNSTATHIST      | 20869 |   427K|  1304 |
    |  22 |              INDEX RANGE SCAN          | RTXNSTATHIST_DX2  | 20869 |       |    29 |
    |  23 |          INDEX RANGE SCAN              | PK_RTXN           |     1 |       |     1 |
    |  24 |           NESTED LOOPS                 |                   |     1 |    24 |     3 |
    |  25 |            TABLE ACCESS BY INDEX ROWID | FILEWAREHOUSE     |     1 |    14 |     2 |
    |  26 |             INDEX RANGE SCAN           | FILEWAREHOUSE_DX2 |     1 |       |     2 |
    |  27 |            TABLE ACCESS BY INDEX ROWID | EXTFILE           |     1 |    10 |     1 |
    |  28 |             INDEX UNIQUE SCAN          | PK_EXTFILE        |     1 |       |     1 |
    |  29 |        TABLE ACCESS FULL               | RTXNTYP           |     1 |    28 |     5 |
    |  30 |       TABLE ACCESS BY INDEX ROWID      | RTXNSTATHIST      |     1 |    16 |     2 |
    |  31 |        INDEX RANGE SCAN                | PK_RTXNSTATHIST   |     1 |       |     1 |
    |  32 |      TABLE ACCESS BY INDEX ROWID       | NTWKNODE          |     1 |     8 |     1 |
    |  33 |       INDEX UNIQUE SCAN                | PK_NTWKNODE       |     1 |       |     1 |
    |  34 |     INDEX UNIQUE SCAN                  | PK_ORG            |     1 |     4 |     1 |
    |  35 |    TABLE ACCESS BY INDEX ROWID         | ACCT              |     1 |    18 |     1 |
    |  36 |     INDEX UNIQUE SCAN                  | PK_ACCT           |     1 |       |     1 |
    Below is the execution plan when running without ORDER BY clause...
    Execution Plan
    | Id  | Operation                             | Name              | Rows  | Bytes | Cost  |
    |   0 | SELECT STATEMENT                      |                   |     1 |   135 |  1537 |
    |   1 |  FILTER                               |                   |       |       |       |
    |   2 |   HASH JOIN                           |                   | 16657 |  1089K|    56 |
    |   3 |    TABLE ACCESS FULL                  | FILETYP           |     6 |    60 |     3 |
    |   4 |    TABLE ACCESS FULL                  | FILETYPSOURCEID   | 16657 |   927K|    52 |
    |   5 |   NESTED LOOPS                        |                   |     1 |    35 |     3 |
    |   6 |    TABLE ACCESS BY INDEX ROWID        | FILEWAREHOUSE     |     1 |    25 |     2 |
    |   7 |     INDEX RANGE SCAN                  | FILEWAREHOUSE_DX2 |     1 |       |     2 |
    |   8 |    TABLE ACCESS BY INDEX ROWID        | EXTFILE           |     1 |    10 |     1 |
    |   9 |     INDEX UNIQUE SCAN                 | PK_EXTFILE        |     1 |       |     1 |
    |  10 |  NESTED LOOPS                         |                   |     1 |   135 |  1534 |
    |  11 |   NESTED LOOPS OUTER                  |                   |     1 |   117 |  1533 |
    |  12 |    NESTED LOOPS OUTER                 |                   |     1 |   113 |  1532 |
    |  13 |     NESTED LOOPS                      |                   |     1 |   105 |  1531 |
    |  14 |      HASH JOIN                        |                   |     5 |   445 |  1524 |
    |  15 |       TABLE ACCESS FULL               | RTXNTYP           |     1 |    28 |     5 |
    |  16 |       TABLE ACCESS BY INDEX ROWID     | RTXN              |     1 |    22 |     1 |
    |  17 |        NESTED LOOPS                   |                   |   117 |  7137 |  1518 |
    |  18 |         VIEW                          | VW_SQ_1           | 20869 |   794K|  1441 |
    |  19 |          HASH GROUP BY                |                   | 20869 |   427K|  1441 |
    |  20 |           FILTER                      |                   |       |       |       |
    |  21 |            TABLE ACCESS BY INDEX ROWID| RTXNSTATHIST      | 20869 |   427K|  1304 |
    |  22 |             INDEX RANGE SCAN          | RTXNSTATHIST_DX2  | 20869 |       |    29 |
    |  23 |         INDEX RANGE SCAN              | PK_RTXN           |     1 |       |     1 |
    |  24 |          NESTED LOOPS                 |                   |     1 |    24 |     3 |
    |  25 |           TABLE ACCESS BY INDEX ROWID | FILEWAREHOUSE     |     1 |    14 |     2 |
    |  26 |            INDEX RANGE SCAN           | FILEWAREHOUSE_DX2 |     1 |       |     2 |
    |  27 |           TABLE ACCESS BY INDEX ROWID | EXTFILE           |     1 |    10 |     1 |
    |  28 |            INDEX UNIQUE SCAN          | PK_EXTFILE        |     1 |       |     1 |
    |  29 |      TABLE ACCESS BY INDEX ROWID      | RTXNSTATHIST      |     1 |    16 |     2 |
    |  30 |       INDEX RANGE SCAN                | PK_RTXNSTATHIST   |     1 |       |     1 |
    |  31 |     TABLE ACCESS BY INDEX ROWID       | NTWKNODE          |     1 |     8 |     1 |
    |  32 |      INDEX UNIQUE SCAN                | PK_NTWKNODE       |     1 |       |     1 |
    |  33 |    INDEX UNIQUE SCAN                  | PK_ORG            |     1 |     4 |     1 |
    |  34 |   TABLE ACCESS BY INDEX ROWID         | ACCT              |     1 |    18 |     1 |
    |  35 |    INDEX UNIQUE SCAN                  | PK_ACCT           |     1 |       |     1 |
    -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------Edited by: user10754555 on Feb 5, 2010 6:02 PM

  • IN clause with ORDER BY clause in sub-queries

    Hello,
    We generate dynamic queries with the following statement pattern (could be many union/intersect sub-queries):
    select my_col
    from my_table
    where my_col IN
    select table_2.my_col , x_col from table_2 where x_col > 10
    UNION
    select table_3.my_col , y_col from table_3 where y_col > 20
    INTERSECT
    select table_4.my_col , z_col from table_4 where z_col is between 30 and 50
    I know that I can do just the sub-queries w/ an ORDER BY clause as follows (as long as the 2nd parameter in the select stmts are of the same type):
    select table_2.my_col , x_col from table_2 where x_col > 10
    UNION
    select table_3.my_col , y_col from table_3 where y_col > 20
    INTERSECT
    select table_4.my_col , z_col from table_4 where z_col is between 30 and 50
    order by 2 desc
    But my questions are:
    1. What is (if there is) the syntax that will ensure that the result set order will be that of the ordering of the sub-queries?
    Or does my SQL stmt have to have syntactically (but not semantically) change to achieve this?
    Thanks,
    Jim

    Randolf Geist wrote:
    just a minor doubt - I think it is not officially supported to have separate ORDER BYs in a compound query with set operators (e.g. UNION / UNION ALL subsets). Of course one could use inline views with NO_MERGE + NO_ELIMINATE_OBY hints, but I think the only officially supported approach is to use a single, final ORDER BY (that needs to use positional notation as far as I remember).
    Randolf,
    You're right, of course, about the separate "order by" clauses.
    Interestingly the following type of thing does work though (in 10.2.0.3, at least):
    with v1 as (
        select * from t1 where col1 = 'ABC' order by col2
    v2 as (
        select * from t1 where col1 = 'DEF' order by col2
    select * from v1
    union all
    select * from v2
    ;A quick check the execution plan suggsts that Oracle appears to be convering this to the following - even though its technically not acceptable in normal circumstances:
    select * from t1 where col1 = 'ABC' order by col2
    union all
    select * from t1 where col1 = 'DEF' order by col2
    ;Regards
    Jonathan Lewis
    http://jonathanlewis.wordpress.com
    http://www.jlcomp.demon.co.uk
    To post code, statspack/AWR report, execution plans or trace files, start and end the section with the tag {noformat}{noformat} (lowercase, curly brackets, no spaces) so that the text appears in fixed format.
    "Science is more than a body of knowledge; it is a way of thinking"
    Carl Sagan                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                   

  • Select statement takes very long to run with order by clause.

    Hi all,
    I have a select statement which when I run without the order by clause takes arround 2 minutes to run. But with the order by clause it goes on for ever. I am trying to access the database server through a network which is not too fast.
    The select statement is based on 9 views which are again based on some views. It also has inline views and outer joins. These views and inline views can not be done away with.
    When selected without the order by clause it gives 3215 records.
    Anything like 2 to 3 minutes will be Ok.
    Thanks.
    --Malay                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                           

    The select statement is as follows :-
    SELECT f.system_name,
    a.signal_type,
    f.sys_signal_name,
    a.bus_desc,
    b.vl_ident,
    b.vl_name,
    b.src_mac,
    b.src_mac_addr,
    b.dest_mac,
    b.dest_mac_addr,
    b.network,
    bb.bufr_size_in_bytes,
    bb.bag_in_ms,
    bb.is_rma_used,
    bb.is_ic_used,
    bb.sub_vl_cnt,
    bb.skew_max_in_ns,
    cc.msg_name,
    c.src_ip,
    c.src_ip_addr,
    c.src_port,
    c.dest_ip,
    c.dest_ip_addr,
    c.dest_port,
    cc.rate_in_ms,
    cc.tx_mode,
    cc.protocol,
    cc.port_type,
    cc.msg_length_in_bytes,
    d.mnemonic,
    d.start_addr32,
    d.lsb,
    d.end_addr32,
    d.msb,
    d.format,
    d.init_value,
    d.fs_mnemonic,
    d.fs_afdx_data_id,
    d.digital_data_id,
    DECODE(
    d.digital_datatype,
    NULL, '',
    'UNUSED', '',
    api$util.concat_column_data(
    'api_'
    || d.digital_datatype,
    'digital_data_id',
    d.digital_data_id,
    bool.FALSE
    ) AS data_details,
    f.connection_id
    || '_'
    || a.digital_bus_id
    || '_'
    || b.afdx_vl_id
    || '_'
    || bb.afdx_output_id
    || '_'
    || c.afdx_frame_id
    || '_'
    || cc.afdx_msg_id
    || '_'
    || d.afdx_data_id AS KEY
    FROM api_afdx a,
    api_afdx_vl b,
    api_afdx_output bb,
    api_afdx_frame c,
    api_afdx_msg cc,
    api_afdx_data d,
    vf_signal e,
    (SELECT DISTINCT aa.signal_id,
    cc.system_name,
    bb.connection_id,
    bb.sys_signal_name
    FROM vf_nodes aa,
    vf_connections bb,
    vf_system cc
    WHERE aa.connection_id = bb.connection_id
    AND bb.system_id = cc.system_id) f
    WHERE e.signal_id = f.signal_id(+)
    AND e.digital_bus_id = a.digital_bus_id
                   AND a.digital_bus_id = bb.digital_bus_id(+)
    AND bb.afdx_output_id = b.afdx_output_id(+)
                   AND b.afdx_vl_id = c.afdx_vl_id(+)
    AND bb.afdx_output_id = cc.afdx_output_id(+)
    AND cc.afdx_msg_id = d.afdx_msg_id(+)
    ORDER BY f.system_name,
    a.signal_type,
    f.sys_signal_name,
    b.vl_name,
    cc.msg_name,
    d.start_addr32,
    d.lsb;
    Where api_afdx ,
    api_afdx_vl ,
    api_afdx_output ,
    api_afdx_frame ,
    api_afdx_msg ,
    api_afdx_data ,
    vf_signal ,
    vf_nodes ,
    vf_connections ,
    vf_system
    are all views.

  • Performance with order by clause

    Dear all,
    please find the below query .if i executed without order by it is going to execute with in 2 sec.if i add order by clause
    it is taking more than 2 min.as per the business we need order by clause .plaese suggest me.it's very urgent.
    SELECT "FACILITY_ID","VESSEL_NAME","CLASS_NUM","SURVEY_REPORT_NO","IMO_NUMBER","VESSEL_TYPE","VESSEL_TYPE_ID","PRIMARY_BUILDER","BUILDER_ID","REGISTER_OWNER","ABS_SURVEY_STATUS_ID","ABS_SURVEY_STATUS_DATE","NOT_ASSIGNED_SINCE","NO_OF_FINDINGS","CASE","SPM_ITM_CAT_NAME","LEAST_CONFIDENCE" FROM (SELECT
    V. FACILITY_ID,
    v.vessel_name,
    v.class_num,
    ASR.SURVEY_REPORT_NO,
    V.IMO_NUMBER,
    V.VESSEL_TYPE,
    v.vessel_type_id,
    V.PRIMARY_BUILDER,
    V.BUILDER_ID,
    V.REGISTER_OWNER,
    ASR.ABS_SURVEY_STATUS_ID,
    ASR.abs_survey_status_date,
    ROUND(SYSDATE - ASR.abs_survey_status_date) AS NOT_ASSIGNED_SINCE,
    (SELECT COUNT(1) FROM ABS_FINDINGS WHERE survey_report_no = asr.survey_report_no AND FIN_TAG_STAT_ID IN( 'TG')) AS no_of_findings,
    CASE WHEN ( SELECT rnum FROM (SELECT survey_report_no,COUNT(rnum) rnum FROM (SELECT a.survey_report_no,COUNT(*) rnum FROM ABS_FINDINGS A,ABS_SURVEY_REPORTS b
         WHERE a.survey_report_no=b.survey_report_no
         GROUP BY a.survey_report_no,spm_item_category) GROUP BY survey_report_no ) WHERE survey_report_no=asr.survey_report_no )=1 THEN
    ( SELECT spm_item_cat_id FROM ABS_FINDINGS WHERE survey_report_no = asr.survey_report_no AND ROWNUM<2)
    ELSE
    5
    END CASE,
    (SELECT SPM_ITM_CAT_NAME FROM SPM_ITEM_CATEGORIES WHERE SPM_ITEM_CAT_ID =
    (CASE WHEN ( SELECT rnum FROM (SELECT survey_report_no,COUNT(rnum) rnum FROM (SELECT a.survey_report_no,COUNT(*) rnum FROM ABS_FINDINGS A,ABS_SURVEY_REPORTS b
         WHERE a.survey_report_no=b.survey_report_no
         GROUP BY a.survey_report_no,spm_item_category) GROUP BY survey_report_no ) WHERE survey_report_no=asr.survey_report_no )=1 THEN
    ( SELECT spm_item_cat_id FROM ABS_FINDINGS WHERE survey_report_no = asr.survey_report_no AND ROWNUM<2)
    ELSE
    5
    END )) AS SPM_ITM_CAT_NAME,
    (SELECT MIN(tag_weight) FROM TAGGED_FINDINGS
              WHERE finding_id IN (SELECT finding_id FROM ABS_FINDINGS WHERE survey_report_no IN (ASR.SURVEY_REPORT_NO))) AS least_confidence
    FROM
    ABS_SURVEY_REPORTS ASR,
    ABS_VESSELS V
    WHERE
    ASR.FACILITY_ID = V.FACILITY_ID
    AND abs_survey_Status_id = 1 ) WHERE no_of_findings>0
    ORDER BY ABS_SURVEY_STATUS_DATE
    Thanks
    venkat

    Please start reading these informative links first:
    HOW TO: Post a SQL statement tuning request - template posting
    When your query takes too long ...
    and then rephrase your question by posting
    - database version
    - execution plans
    - etc. (see the links above)
    Put the tag before and after your examples, so it'll stay formatted.
    See: http://forums.oracle.com/forums/help.jspa                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                       

  • Oracle query tuning : query with Order-by clause

    Hi
    I am having a query in my database :
    SELECT * FROM SAPR3.HRP1001 WHERE "MANDT" = 990
    ORDER BY
    "MANDT" , "OTYPE" , "OBJID" , "PLVAR" , "RSIGN" , "RELAT" , "ISTAT" , "PRIOX" , "BEGDA" , "ENDDA" ,"VARYF" , "SEQNR" ;
    Autotrace output is :
    Execution Plan
    0 SELECT STATEMENT Optimizer=CHOOSE (Cost=4649 Card=171895 Byt
    es=22862035)
    1 0 SORT (ORDER BY) (Cost=4649 Card=171895 Bytes=22862035)
    2 1 TABLE ACCESS (FULL) OF 'HRP1001' (Cost=1170 Card=171895
    Bytes=22862035)
    Statistics
    0 recursive calls
    5 db block gets
    12157 consistent gets
    11543 physical reads
    0 redo size
    38253080 bytes sent via SQL*Net to client
    376841 bytes received via SQL*Net from client
    34201 SQL*Net roundtrips to/from client
    0 sorts (memory)
    1 sorts (disk)
    512992 rows processed
    Since it is a issue with order by , it seems a PGA memory issue. there is 12GB PGA available but only 3GB gets allocated. pga_aggregate target is set in the DB. There is a index created for al the columns on order by, but it is not getting used.
    pleas suggest me as I am running into major problems, i can post the output of any query u require from my side. Any help wil be highly apprciated.
    Rishi

    > The query was alwasy spilling over to the One-Parse execution . It can be seen thru ST04N ->resource consumption-> sql work area trace.
    >
    > An undocumented oracle parameter smmmax_size was set which allowed for more usage of physical memory by single process and there was no spillover to the TEMP tablespaces.
    >
    > Also the File read time was analysed from Unix level ( From SAP thru ST04 ->filesystem wait s-> Avg rd (ms) and Ang writes (ms) which showed that reading from the File was not happening well. )
    Hi Rishi,
    the provided execution statistics prove the opposite:
    >Statistics
    >...
    >0 sorts (memory)
    > 1 sorts (disk)
    >512992 rows processed
    This indeed was a single-pass sort, which means it had to use the temp tablespace for one pass of the sorting/grouping.
    Remember that Oracle distinguishes three kinds of sorts: 1. "in memory", 2. "single-pass" and 3. "multi-pass".
    Only the first one won't need to spill out data to the disks. The others do this by definition.
    BTW: the file read times in ST04 are aquired through Oracle V$ views and not directly from the OS - that can make a big difference sometimes.
    regards,
    Lars

  • ROWNUM can use with ORDER BY clause?

    Hi
    Following i have two quires in ROWNUM order for example..
    1:query
    select rownum,empno,ename,deptno from emp
    where rownum <= 14;
    result:
    rownum empno ename deptno
    1 7369 SMITH 20
    2 7499 ALLEN 30
    3 7521 WARD 30
    4 7566 JONES 20
    5 7654 MARTIN 30
    6 7698 BLAKE 30
    7 7782 CLARK 10
    8 7788 SCOTT 20
    9 7839 KING 10
    10 7844 TURNER 30
    11 7876 ADAMS 20
    12 7900 JAMES 30
    13 7902 FORD 20
    14 7934 MILLER 10
    2:Query , add ORDER BY clause it will change the sequence of ROWNUM.
    select rownum,empno,ename,deptno from emp
    where rownum <= 14
    order by deptno;
    result:
    rownum empno ename deptno
    7 7782 CLARK 10
    9 7839 KING 10
    14 7934 MILLER 10
    1 7369 SMITH 20
    11 7876 ADAMS 20
    13 7902 FORD 20
    8 7788 SCOTT 20
    and so on......
    but i want these records from 2 to 5...how i can query this through ROWNUM or any sequence because ORDER BY clause change the order of ROWNUM and i could get this result.
    rownum empno ename deptno
    9 7839 KING 10
    14 7934 MILLER 10
    1 7369 SMITH 20
    11 7876 ADAMS 20
    please send me general query which i can apply on any table.
    advance thanks.

    My guess is that you are looking for a pagination solution. If so, here is a thread on Asktom:
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    ,     child_part     CHAR(25)
    ,     line_nbr     NUMBER(5)
    ,     qty_per          NUMBER(9,5)
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    INSERT INTO bill_test1 VALUES ('ABC-1','ABC-30',300,3);
    INSERT INTO bill_test1 VALUES ('ABC-1','HARDWARE-1',401,10);
    INSERT INTO bill_test1 VALUES ('ABC-1','HARDWARE-2',402,5);
    INSERT INTO bill_test1 VALUES ('ABC-10','ABC-155',100,2);
    INSERT INTO bill_test1 VALUES ('ABC-10','HARDWARE-1',200,1);
    INSERT INTO bill_test1 VALUES ('ABC-155','RAW-2',100,4.8);
    INSERT INTO bill_test1 VALUES ('ABC-155','HARDWARE-3',200,3);
    INSERT INTO bill_test1 VALUES ('ABC-20','RAW-1',100,10.2);
    INSERT INTO bill_test1 VALUES ('ABC-30','RAW-3',100,3);And the query below gives me exactly what I want, in the order I want it. However, I am wondering if there is a way to get this order without creating the SEQ column, since I don't need it in my results
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    ,     parent_part
    ,     child_part
    FROM     (
         SELECT     CONNECT_BY_ROOT b.parent_part                         AS part_nbr
         ,     b.parent_part
         ,     b.child_part
         ,     SYS_CONNECT_BY_PATH(b.line_nbr,' ')                    AS seq
         FROM     bill_test1 b
         ,     dual
         CONNECT BY     parent_part     = PRIOR child_part
    WHERE          part_nbr     = 'ABC-1'
    ORDER BY     seq
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    PART_NBR                     PARENT_PART                  CHILD_PART                   SEQ
    ABC-1                        ABC-1                        ABC-10                        100
    ABC-1                        ABC-10                       ABC-155                       100 100
    ABC-1                        ABC-155                      RAW-2                         100 100 100
    ABC-1                        ABC-155                      HARDWARE-3                    100 100 200
    ABC-1                        ABC-10                       HARDWARE-1                    100 200
    ABC-1                        ABC-1                        ABC-20                        200
    ABC-1                        ABC-20                       RAW-1                         200 100
    ABC-1                        ABC-1                        ABC-30                        300
    ABC-1                        ABC-30                       RAW-3                         300 100
    ABC-1                        ABC-1                        HARDWARE-1                    401
    ABC-1                        ABC-1                        HARDWARE-2                    402

    Hi,
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    The query you posted doesn't require a suib-query, so you can say:
    SELECT     CONNECT_BY_ROOT b.parent_part                         AS part_nbr
    ,     b.parent_part
    ,     b.child_part
    --,     SYS_CONNECT_BY_PATH(b.line_nbr,' ')                    AS seq
    FROM     bill_test1 b
    WHERE          CONNECT_BY_ROOT b.parent_part     = 'ABC-1'
    CONNECT BY     parent_part     = PRIOR child_part
    ORDER SIBLINGS BY     b.line_nbr     
    ;I said the query you posted doesn't require a sub-query. It also doesn't require dual, so I suspect what you posted is a simplification of what you're really doing, and that may need a sub-query. In particular, if you intend to GROUP BY part_nbr, then you need the sub-query. We can repeat the CONNECT_BY_ROOT expression in the WHERE clause (or, now that I think about it, use a START WITH clause instead of WHERE), but, for some reason, we can't use CONNECT_BY_ROOT in a GROUP BY clause; we need to compute CONNECT_BY_ROOT in a sub-query, give it a name (like part_nbr), and GROUP BY that column in a super-query.
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    Here's what I meant by using START WITH instead of WHERE:
    SELECT     CONNECT_BY_ROOT b.parent_part                         AS part_nbr
    ,     b.parent_part
    ,     b.child_part
    --,     SYS_CONNECT_BY_PATH(b.line_nbr,' ')                    AS seq
    FROM     bill_test1 b
    START WITH     b.parent_part     = 'ABC-1'
    CONNECT BY     parent_part     = PRIOR child_part
    ORDER SIBLINGS BY     b.line_nbr     
    ;This should be much more efficient, because it narrows down the results before you waste time getting their descendants.
    Using a START WITH clause here is analagous to me sending you an e-mail, saying "Come to a meeting a my office at 3:00."
    Using a WHERE clause here is analagous to me sending an e-mail to everyone in the company, saying "Come to a meeting a my office at 3:00", and then, as people get here, telling everyone except you that they can go back.
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    Edited by: Frank Kulash on Dec 9, 2010 2:39 PM
    Added version with START WITH clause

  • Connect with order by clause

    I have a query to get all child records from table lm and in the order they stored in a table s
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    A bit add to remarkable blushadow's comments.
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             2 JONES
             3 SCOTT
             4 ADAMS
             3 FORD
             4 SMITH
             2 BLAKE
             3 ALLEN
             3 WARD
             3 MARTIN
             3 TURNER
             3 JAMES
             2 CLARK
             3 MILLER
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      2  order siblings by ename;
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             1 KING
             2 BLAKE
             3 ALLEN
             3 JAMES
             3 MARTIN
             3 TURNER
             3 WARD
             2 CLARK
             3 MILLER
             2 JONES
             3 FORD
             4 SMITH
             3 SCOTT
             4 ADAMS
    14 rows selected.Rgds.

  • Sort problem in a sql statement with Order by clause

    Hello,
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    VI-WWAD110
    VI-WV83
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    VI-WVLZ811
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    VI-WVLA9C3
    VI-WVLA4R5
    VI-WVLA2.8
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    VI-WVCP210
    VI-WVCP100
    VI-WVCM200
    VI-WVCM140
    VI-WVCM110
    VI-WVCM100
    VI-WVBP70
    VI-WVBP110
    VI-WVBP102
    VI-WVBP100
    VI-WVBM900
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    VI-WVBM90
    VI-WVBM80
    VI-WVBM190
    VI-WVBM170
    VI-WVBM140
    VI-WJ523
    VI-WJ521
    VI-WJ450
    VI-WJ410
    VI-WJSQ308
    VI-WD7/MK
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    VI-VTL-W
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    VI-TVB125
    VI-TC21S3M
    VI-PTZFI/G
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    VI-PAR/CAM
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    VI-MJ-DS
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    VI-JC43BL
    VI-JCM1000
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    VI-IR600BU
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    VID-WVLF93
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    VID-WVLA4.
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    VID-WVLA18
    VID-WVLA12
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    VID-WVBM80
    VID-WVBL90
    VID-WVBB10
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    VI-AG6730
    VI-AG6124B
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    VID-WVBL90
    VID-WVBM80
    VID-WVBM90
    VID-WVLA12
    VID-WVLA18
    VID-WVLA36
    VID-WVLA4.
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    VID-WV40
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    VID-WV83
    VID-WV95
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    thanks a lot
    Fab
    null

    Hi,
    With the data provided by you,i created the same set of table with the values.Tried the same query,when sorting it considers '-' also and then only it sorts.For me the order was perferct with 'VID' values first and then 'VI' values.
    when i issued the second query the values of 'VID' alone came .
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    null

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