ORDER BY Clause: ORDER BY {[col_name | col_number [ASC | DESC]]}, ... : Order by « Query « SQL Server / T-SQL Tutorial






4> CREATE TABLE employee(
5>    id          INTEGER NOT NULL PRIMARY KEY,
6>    first_name  VARCHAR(10),
7>    last_name   VARCHAR(10),
8>    salary      DECIMAL(10,2),
9>    start_Date  DATETIME,
10>    region      VARCHAR(10),
11>    city        VARCHAR(20),
12>    managerid   INTEGER
13> );
14> GO
1> INSERT INTO employee VALUES (1, 'Jason' ,  'Martin', 5890,'2005-03-22','North','Vancouver',3);
2> GO

(1 rows affected)
1> INSERT INTO employee VALUES (2, 'Alison',  'Mathews',4789,'2003-07-21','South','Utown',4);
2> GO

(1 rows affected)
1> INSERT INTO employee VALUES (3, 'James' ,  'Smith',  6678,'2001-12-01','North','Paris',5);
2> GO

(1 rows affected)
1> INSERT INTO employee VALUES (4, 'Celia' ,  'Rice',   5567,'2006-03-03','South','London',6);
2> GO

(1 rows affected)
1> INSERT INTO employee VALUES (5, 'Robert',  'Black',  4467,'2004-07-02','East','Newton',7);
2> GO

(1 rows affected)
1> INSERT INTO employee VALUES (6, 'Linda' ,  'Green' , 6456,'2002-05-19','East','Calgary',8);
2> GO

(1 rows affected)
1> INSERT INTO employee VALUES (7, 'David' ,  'Larry',  5345,'2008-03-18','West','New York',9);
2> GO

(1 rows affected)
1> INSERT INTO employee VALUES (8, 'James' ,  'Cat',    4234,'2007-07-17','West','Regina',9);
2> GO

(1 rows affected)
1> INSERT INTO employee VALUES (9, 'Joan'  ,  'Act',    6123,'2001-04-16','North','Toronto',10);
2> GO

(1 rows affected)
1>
2> select * from employee;
3> GO
id          first_name last_name  salary       start_Date              region     city                 managerid
----------- ---------- ---------- ------------ ----------------------- ---------- -------------------- -----------
          1 Jason      Martin          5890.00 2005-03-22 00:00:00.000 North      Vancouver                      3
          2 Alison     Mathews         4789.00 2003-07-21 00:00:00.000 South      Utown                          4
          3 James      Smith           6678.00 2001-12-01 00:00:00.000 North      Paris                          5
          4 Celia      Rice            5567.00 2006-03-03 00:00:00.000 South      London                         6
          5 Robert     Black           4467.00 2004-07-02 00:00:00.000 East       Newton                         7
          6 Linda      Green           6456.00 2002-05-19 00:00:00.000 East       Calgary                        8
          7 David      Larry           5345.00 2008-03-18 00:00:00.000 West       New York                       9
          8 James      Cat             4234.00 2007-07-17 00:00:00.000 West       Regina                         9
          9 Joan       Act             6123.00 2001-04-16 00:00:00.000 North      Toronto                       10

(9 rows affected)
1>
2>
3> SELECT id
4> FROM employee
5> ORDER BY id
6>
7>
8> drop table employee;
9> GO
id
-----------
          1
          2
          3
          4
          5
          6
          7
          8
          9

(9 rows affected)

The columns in the ORDER BY clause need not appear in the SELECT list.








1.3.Order by
1.3.1.The expanded syntax of the ORDER BY clause
1.3.2.ORDER BY Clause: ORDER BY {[col_name | col_number [ASC | DESC]]}, ...
1.3.3.Sorting your grouped results with ORDER BY clause.
1.3.4.An ORDER BY clause that sorts by one column in descending sequence
1.3.5.the order criterion may contain more than one column.
1.3.6.An ORDER BY clause that sorts by three columns
1.3.7.An ORDER BY clause that uses an alias
1.3.8.An ORDER BY clause that uses an expression
1.3.9.An ORDER BY clause that uses column positions
1.3.10.Sorting your grouped results by an aggregate.
1.3.11.NULLs Sort Last
1.3.12.order criterion contains any aggregate function.
1.3.13.Order by not null date
1.3.14.Using the TOP keyword with Ordered Results
1.3.15.do our sorting using numeric fields
1.3.16.use CAST function to sort during ordering