Difference between revisions of "LOGICAL Operators"
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* Comparison operators (5, 4, ¼, LIKE, and so forth) are solved next. | * Comparison operators (5, 4, ¼, LIKE, and so forth) are solved next. | ||
* Logical operators have a lower precedence and are evaluated last—in the order NOT, AND, and OR. | * Logical operators have a lower precedence and are evaluated last—in the order NOT, AND, and OR. | ||
SELECT * | |||
FROM books | |||
WHERE (category = 'FAMILY LIFE' | |||
OR pubid=4) | |||
AND cost > 15; | |||
[[#Rules for Dates|Back To Top]]-[[Main_Page| Home]] - [[Oracle_SQL|Category]] | [[#Rules for Dates|Back To Top]]-[[Main_Page| Home]] - [[Oracle_SQL|Category]] |
Revision as of 19:55, 24 October 2017
At times, you need to search for records based on two or more conditions. In these situations, you can use logical operators to combine search conditions. The logical operators AND and OR are commonly used for this purpose. (The NOT operator mentioned in Table 8-2 is also a logical operator in Oracle 11g, but it’s used to reverse the meaning of search conditions rather than combine them.) Keep in mind that when a query executes, records can be filtered with WHERE clause conditions. In other words, each record in the table is compared with the stated condition. If the condition is TRUE when compared with a record, the record is included in the results.
SELECT title, pubid, category FROM books WHERE pubid = 3 AND category = 'COMPUTER'
SELECT title, pubid, category FROM books WHERE pubid = 3 OR category = 'COMPUTER'
Order of Logical Operators
- Arithmetic operations are solved first.
- Comparison operators (5, 4, ¼, LIKE, and so forth) are solved next.
- Logical operators have a lower precedence and are evaluated last—in the order NOT, AND, and OR.
SELECT * FROM books WHERE (category = 'FAMILY LIFE' OR pubid=4) AND cost > 15;