More Than One Analytical Function May Be Used in a Single Statement ROW_NUMBER(), RANK(), DENSE_RANK() : ROW_NUMBER « Analytical Functions « Oracle PL / SQL






More Than One Analytical Function May Be Used in a Single Statement ROW_NUMBER(), RANK(), DENSE_RANK()

 


SQL>
SQL> -- create demo table
SQL> create table Employee(
  2    empno              Number(3)  NOT NULL, -- Employee ID
  3    ename              VARCHAR2(10 BYTE),   -- Employee Name
  4    hireDate          DATE,                -- Date Employee Hired
  5    orig_salary        Number(8,2),         -- Orignal Salary
  6    curr_salary        Number(8,2),         -- Current Salary
  7    region             VARCHAR2(1 BYTE)     -- Region where employeed
  8  )
  9  /

Table created.

SQL>
SQL> create table job(
  2    empno              Number(3)  NOT NULL, -- Employee ID
  3    jobtitle           VARCHAR2(10 BYTE)    -- Employee job title
  4  )
  5  /

Table created.

SQL> -- prepare data for employee table
SQL> insert into Employee(empno,  ename,  hireDate,                       orig_salary, curr_salary, region)
  2                values(122,'Alison',to_date('19960321','YYYYMMDD'), 45000,       48000,       'E')
  3  /

1 row created.

SQL> insert into Employee(empno,  ename,  hireDate,                       orig_salary, curr_salary, region)
  2                values(123, 'James',to_date('19781212','YYYYMMDD'), 23000,       32000,       'W')
  3  /

1 row created.

SQL> insert into Employee(empno,  ename,  hireDate,                       orig_salary, curr_salary, region)
  2                values(104,'Celia',to_date('19821024','YYYYMMDD'), 53000,       58000,        'E')
  3  /

1 row created.

SQL> insert into Employee(empno,  ename,  hireDate,                       orig_salary, curr_salary, region)
  2                values(105,'Robert',to_date('19840115','YYYYMMDD'), 31000,      36000,        'W')
  3  /

1 row created.

SQL> insert into Employee(empno,  ename,  hireDate,                       orig_salary, curr_salary, region)
  2                values(116,'Linda', to_date('19870730','YYYYMMDD'), 43000,       53000,       'E')
  3  /

1 row created.

SQL> insert into Employee(empno,  ename,  hireDate,                       orig_salary, curr_salary, region)
  2                values(117,'David', to_date('19901231','YYYYMMDD'), 78000,       85000,       'W')
  3  /

1 row created.

SQL> insert into Employee(empno,  ename,  hireDate,                       orig_salary, curr_salary, region)
  2                values(108,'Jode',  to_date('19960917','YYYYMMDD'), 21000,       29000,       'E')
  3  /

1 row created.

SQL>
SQL> -- prepare data for job table
SQL>
SQL> insert into job(empno, jobtitle)
  2           values(101,   'Painter');

1 row created.

SQL>
SQL> insert into job(empno, jobtitle)
  2           values(122,   'Tester');

1 row created.

SQL>
SQL> insert into job(empno, jobtitle)
  2           values(123,   'Dediator');

1 row created.

SQL>
SQL> insert into job(empno, jobtitle)
  2           values(104,   'Chemist');

1 row created.

SQL>
SQL> insert into job(empno, jobtitle)
  2           values(105,   'Accountant');

1 row created.

SQL>
SQL> insert into job(empno, jobtitle)
  2           values(116,   'Manager');

1 row created.

SQL>
SQL> insert into job(empno, jobtitle)
  2           values(117,   'Programmer');

1 row created.

SQL>
SQL> insert into job(empno, jobtitle)
  2           values(108,   'Developer');

1 row created.

SQL>
SQL>
SQL> -- display data in the table
SQL> select * from Employee
  2  /
Hit a key to continue

     EMPNO ENAME      HIREDATE  ORIG_SALARY CURR_SALARY R
---------- ---------- --------- ----------- ----------- -
       122 Alison     21-MAR-96       45000       48000 E
       123 James      12-DEC-78       23000       32000 W
       104 Celia      24-OCT-82       53000       58000 E
       105 Robert     15-JAN-84       31000       36000 W
       116 Linda      30-JUL-87       43000       53000 E
       117 David      31-DEC-90       78000       85000 W
       108 Jode       17-SEP-96       21000       29000 E

7 rows selected.

SQL> select * from job;
Hit a key to continue

     EMPNO JOBTITLE
---------- ----------
       101 Painter
       122 Tester
       123 Dediator
       104 Chemist
       105 Accountant
       116 Manager
       117 Programmer
       108 Developer

8 rows selected.

SQL>
SQL> -- More Than One Analytical Function May Be Used in a Single Statement
SQL>
SQL>
SQL>
SQL> SELECT empno, ename, curr_salary,
  2    ROW_NUMBER() OVER(ORDER BY curr_salary) rnum,
  3    RANK() OVER(ORDER BY curr_salary) rank,
  4    DENSE_RANK() OVER(ORDER BY curr_salary) drank
  5  FROM employee
  6  ORDER BY ename;
Hit a key to continue

     EMPNO ENAME      CURR_SALARY       RNUM       RANK      DRANK
---------- ---------- ----------- ---------- ---------- ----------
       122 Alison           48000          4          4          4
       104 Celia            58000          6          6          6
       117 David            85000          7          7          7
       123 James            32000          2          2          2
       108 Jode             29000          1          1          1
       116 Linda            53000          5          5          5
       105 Robert           36000          3          3          3

7 rows selected.

SQL>
SQL>
SQL>
SQL>
SQL> drop table job;

Table dropped.

SQL>
SQL> -- clean the table
SQL> drop table Employee;

Table dropped.

SQL>
SQL>
           
         
  








Related examples in the same category

1.ROW_NUMBER(): return a number with each row in a group, starting at 1
2.ROW_NUMBER function with an ordering on salary in descending order
3.ROW_NUMBER() with order in descending order
4.Rank() with nulls last
5.row_number over partition by and order by
6.Sum over and row_number() over
7.Decode the result from row_number over, partition by, order by
8.Open a cursor created by using row_number function
9.Create a view based on row_number function
10.row_number() over (partition by deptno order)