Bienvenido al sitio de software libre de CUTE, editor de bases de datos para MS Access y SQL Server. Este proyecto necesita reanimación desde Marzo de 2013.

 

Se puede realizar mediante donaciones, patrocinio o ayuda en la instalación.

donate sponsor aided installation
 

O puedes ayudar escribiendo nuevas traducciones, un artículo en la wikipedia acerca del programa, comentarios en foros o blogs, añadir código o documentación, etc... En cualquier caso gracias.

Update (SQL)

An SQL UPDATE statement changes the data of one or more records in a table. Either all the rows can be updated, or a subset may be chosen using a condition.

The UPDATE statement has the following form:

UPDATE table_name SET column_name = value [, column_name = value ...] [WHERE condition]

For the UPDATE to be successful, the user must have data manipulation privileges (UPDATE privilege) on the table or column, the updated value must not conflict with all the applicable constraints (such as primary keys, unique indexes, CHECK constraints, and NOT NULL constraints).

In some databases, as PostgreSQL, when a FROM clause is present, what essentially happens is that the target table is joined to the tables mentioned in the fromlist, and each output row of the join represents an update operation for the target table. When using FROM you should ensure that the join produces at most one output row for each row to be modified. In other words, a target row shouldn't join to more than one row from the other table(s). If it does, then only one of the join rows will be used to update the target row, but which one will be used is not readily predictable.

Because of this indeterminacy, referencing other tables only within sub-selects is safer, though often harder to read and slower than using a join.

Examples

Set the value of column C1 in table T to 1, only in those rows where the value of column C2 is "a".

UPDATE T SET C1 = 1 WHERE C2 = 'a'

In table T, set the value of column C1 to 9 and the value of C3 to 4 for all rows for which the value of column C2 is "a".

UPDATE T SET C1 = 9, C3 = 4 WHERE C2 = 'a'

Increase value of column C1 by 1 if the value in column C2 is "a".

UPDATE T SET C1 = C1 + 1 WHERE C2 = 'a'

Prepend the value in column C1 with the string "text" if the value in column C2 is "a".

UPDATE T SET C1 = 'text' || C1 WHERE C2 = 'a'

Set the value of column C1 in table T1 to 2, only if the value of column C2 is found in the sub list of values in column C3 in table T2 having the column C4 equal to 0.

UPDATE T1 
SET    C1 = 2    
WHERE  C2 IN ( SELECT C3
               FROM   T2
               WHERE  C4 = 0)

You may also update multiple columns in a single update statement:

UPDATE T SET C1 = 1, C2 = 2

Complex conditions and JOINs are also possible:

UPDATE T SET A = 1 WHERE C1 = 1 AND C2 = 2
UPDATE a
SET a.[updated_column] = updatevalue
FROM articles a 
JOIN classification c 
ON a.articleID = c.articleID 
WHERE c.classID = 1

Or on Oracle systems (assuming there is an index on classification.articleID)

UPDATE
(SELECT *FROM articles
    JOIN classification
      ON articles.articleID = classification.articleID
   WHERE classification.classID = 1
)
SET [updated_column] = updatevalue

Content extracted from free documentation (Wikipedia and other sources).

Comments:

Add your comment:

Gender:
(Too weird, even outrageous perhaps?: try a regeneration)
Top of the page