Design & Development Articles
May
2005- What is SQL?
by John L
SQL stands for
Structured Query Language and is the lingua franca in the database world.
SQL is a standard
that is used by all database vendors and programmers to define, extract
and access the information that is stored in databases.
SQL began life
as an IBM creation but was standardized by the American National Standards
Institute (ANSI) and the International Organization for Standardization
(ISO) as ANSI/ISO SQL in 1988.
Since then ANSI/ISO
SQL standard continued to evolve. The ANSI-SQL group has since published
three standards over the years:
1. SQL89 (SQL1)
2. SQL92 (SQL2)
3. SQL99 (SQL3)
SQL is a query
language. It is English-like and easy to use.
However, although
there are more than 90 SQL reserved words, most programmers seldom use
more than the following handful of commands - SELECT, INSERT, UPDATE,
DELETE, FROM, WHERE, HAVING, BETWEEN, LIKE, OR, AND, NOT, IN, ORDER, GROUP
and BY. For example, if you had a database table named "employees" and
you wanted to retrieve all records where the employee has the last name
"goodman", you would use the following SQL statement: SELECT * FROM employees
WHERE lastname = 'goodman'; There are many different categories of SQL
statements but the basic ones which all programmers should be familiar
with are the SQL statements that:
1. Create tables
and manipulate their definitions
2. Query the
table data
3. Manipulate
the table data SQL is predominantly used by 2 types of users - programs
and humans (keying in the commands through a database client) - to pass
instructions to databases.
SQL commands
can be keyed into a database client like the MySQL Query Browser or the
SQL Server Enterprise Manager and executed to either return a result or
modify records in the database. SQL can also be used in conjunction with
programming language or scripting language like Microsoft Visual Basic
or PHP to communicate with the database.
Although SQL
is a world standard, it is unfortunate that most database vendors have
come up with different dialects and variations. This is because every
database vendor wants to differentiate their database products from the
crowd. One good example is Microsoft SQL Server's TRANSACT-SQL. TRANSACT-SQL
is a superset of SQL and is designed for use only with Microsoft SQL Server.
Although it
does make programming much easier for software developers, it is not compliant
with other databases like Oracle or MySQL - making TRANSACT-SQL programs
non database-portable.
As such, although
many of these features are powerful and robust, it is good practice to
exercise caution and limit your SQL use to be compliant with the ANSI/ISO
SQL standards and ODBC-Compliant.
Courtesty of
SQLPrimer.com.
For more information,
please contact the Webmaster of SQLPrimer.com - http://www.sqlprimer.com.
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