45 Essential SQL Interview Questions and Answers
45 Essential SQL Interview Questions and Answers
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What does UNION do? What is the difference between UNION and UNION ALL?
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UNION merges the contents of two structurally-compatible tables into a single combined table. The difference between UNION and UNION ALL is that UNION will omit
duplicate records whereas UNION ALL will include duplicate records.
It is important to note that the performance of UNION ALL will typically be better than UNION, since UNION requires the server to do the additional work of removing any
duplicates. So, in cases where is is certain that there will not be any duplicates, or where having duplicates is not a problem, use of UNION ALL would be
recommended for performance reasons.
List and explain the different types of JOIN clauses supported in ANSI-standard SQL.
INNER JOIN (a.k.a. “simple join”): Returns all rows for which there is at least one match in BOTH tables. This is the default type of join if no specific JOIN type
is specified.
LEFT JOIN (or LEFT OUTER JOIN): Returns all rows from the left table, and the matched rows from the right table; i.e., the results will contain all records from
the left table, even if the JOIN condition doesn’t find any matching records in the right table. This means that if the ON clause doesn’t match any records in the
right table, the JOIN will still return a row in the result for that record in the left table, but with NULL in each column from the right table.
RIGHT JOIN (or RIGHT OUTER JOIN): Returns all rows from the right table, and the matched rows from the left table. This is the exact opposite of a LEFT JOIN;
i.e., the results will contain all records from the right table, even if the JOIN condition doesn’t find any matching records in the left table. This means that if the
ON clause doesn’t match any records in the left table, the JOIN will still return a row in the result for that record in the right table, but with NULL in each
column from the left table.
FULL JOIN (or FULL OUTER JOIN): Returns all rows for which there is a match in EITHER of the tables. Conceptually, a FULL JOIN combines the effect of
applying both a LEFT JOIN and a RIGHT JOIN; i.e., its result set is equivalent to performing a UNION of the results of left and right outer queries.
CROSS JOIN: Returns all records where each row from the first table is combined with each row from the second table (i.e., returns the Cartesian product of the
sets of rows from the joined tables). Note that a CROSS JOIN can either be specified using the CROSS JOIN syntax (“explicit join notation”) or (b) listing the
tables in the FROM clause separated by commas without using a WHERE clause to supply join criteria (“implicit join notation”).
For a table orders having a column defined simply as customer_id VARCHAR(100), consider the following two query results:
SELECT count(*) AS total FROM orders;
+-------+
| total |
+-------+
| 100 |
+-------+
+----------------+
| cust_123_total |
+----------------+
| 15 |
+----------------+
Given the above query results, what will be the result of the query below?
SELECT count(*) AS cust_not_123_total FROM orders WHERE customer_id <> '123';
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The obvious answer is 85 (i.e, 100 - 15). However, that is not necessarily correct. Specifically, any records with a customer_id of NULL will not be included in either
count (i.e., they won’t be included in cust_123_total, nor will they be included in cust_not_123_total). For example, if exactly one of the 100 customers has a NULL
customer_id, the result of the last query will be:
+--------- ----------+
| cust_not_123_total |
+--------------------+
| 84 |
+--------------------+
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What will be the result of the query below? Explain your answer and provide a version that behaves correctly.
select case when null = null then 'Yup' else 'Nope' end as Result;
This query will actually yield “Nope”, seeming to imply that null is not equal to itself! The reason for this is that the proper way to compare a value to null in SQL
is with the is operator, not with =.
Accordingly, the correct version of the above query that yields the expected result (i.e., “Yup”) would be as follows:
select case when null is null then 'Yup' else 'Nope' end as Result;
This is because null represents an unknown value. If you don’t know the value, you can’t know whether it equals another value, so = null is always assumed to be
false.
Explain your answer and also provide an alternative version of this query that will avoid the issue that it exposes.
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Surprisingly, given the sample data provided, the result of this query will be an empty set. The reason for this is as follows: If the set being evaluated by the SQL NOT
IN condition contains any values that are null, then the outer query here will return an empty set, even if there are many runner ids that match winner_ids in the races
table.
Note, this is assuming the standard SQL behavior that you get without modifying the default ANSI_NULLS setting.
The EXISTS clause in the above query is a red herring. It will always be true since ID is not a member of dbo.docs. As such, it will refer to the envelope table
comparing itself to itself!
The idnum value of NULL will not be set since the join of NULL will not return a result when attempting a match with any value of envelope.
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The expression BillingYear in the WHERE clause is invalid. Even though it is defined as an alias in the SELECT phrase, which appears before the WHERE phrase,
the logical processing order of the phrases of the statement is different from the written order. Most programmers are accustomed to code statements being processed
generally top-to-bottom or left-to-right, but T-SQL processes phrases in a different order.
Here is a query written to return the list of customers not referred by Jane Smith:
SELECT Name FROM Customers WHERE ReferredBy <> 2;
What will be the result of the query? Why? What would be a better way to write it?
Although there are 4 customers not referred by Jane Smith (including Jane Smith herself), the query will only return one: Pat Richards. All the customers who were
referred by nobody at all (and therefore have NULL in their ReferredBy column) don’t show up. But certainly those customers weren’t referred by Jane Smith, and
certainly NULL is not equal to 2, so why didn’t they show up?
SQL Server uses three-valued logic, which can be troublesome for programmers accustomed to the more satisfying two-valued logic (TRUE or FALSE) most
programming languages use. In most languages, if you were presented with two predicates: ReferredBy = 2 and ReferredBy <> 2, you would expect one of them to
be true and one of them to be false, given the same value of ReferredBy. In SQL Server, however, if ReferredBy is NULL, neither of them are true and neither of
them are false. Anything compared to NULL evaluates to the third value in three-valued logic: UNKNOWN.
…or:
SELECT Name FROM Customers WHERE ISNULL(ReferredBy, 0) <> 2; -- (Or COALESCE() )
This will return the same faulty set as the original. Why? We already covered that: Anything compared to NULL evaluates to the third value in the three-valued
logic: UNKNOWN. That “anything” includes NULL itself! That’s why SQL Server provides the IS NULL and IS NOT NULL operators to specifically check for
NULL. Those particular operators will always evaluate to true or false.
Even if a candidate doesn’t have a great amount of experience with SQL Server, diving into the intricacies of three-valued logic in general can give a good indication
of whether they have the ability learn it quickly or whether they will struggle with it.
Considering the database schema displayed in the SQLServer-style diagram below, write a SQL query to return a list of all the invoices. For each invoice, show the
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Invoice ID, the billing date, the customer’s name, and the name of the customer who referred that customer (if any). The list should be ordered by billing date.
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This question simply tests the candidate’s ability take a plain-English requirement and write a corresponding SQL query. There is nothing tricky in this one, it just
covers the basics:
Did the candidate remember to use a LEFT JOIN instead of an inner JOIN when joining the customer table for the referring customer name? If not, any
invoices by customers not referred by somebody will be left out altogether.
Did the candidate alias the tables in the JOIN? Most experienced T-SQL programmers always do this, because repeating the full table name each time it needs
to be referenced gets tedious quickly. In this case, the query would actually break if at least the Customer table wasn’t aliased, because it is referenced twice in
different contexts (once as the table which contains the name of the invoiced customer, and once as the table which contains the name of the referring
customer).
Did the candidate disambiguate the Id and Name columns in the SELECT? Again, this is something most experienced programmers do automatically, whether
or not there would be a conflict. And again, in this case there would be a conflict, so the query would break if the candidate neglected to do so.
Note that this query will not return Invoices that do not have an associated Customer. This may be the correct behavior for most cases (e.g., it is guaranteed that
every Invoice is associated with a Customer, or unmatched Invoices are not of interest). However, in order to guarantee that all Invoices are returned no matter what,
the Invoices table should be joined with Customers using LEFT JOIN:
SELECT i.Id, i.BillingDate, c.Name, r.Name AS ReferredByName
FROM Invoices i
LEFT JOIN Customers c ON i.CustomerId = c.Id
LEFT JOIN Customers r ON c.ReferredBy = r.Id
ORDER BY i.BillingDate;
If there are 10 records in the Emp table and 5 records in the Dept table, how many rows will be displayed in the result of the following SQL query:
Select * From Emp, Dept
The query will result in 50 rows as a “cartesian product” or “cross join”, which is the default whenever the ‘where’ clause is omitted.
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Given a table SALARIES, such as the one below, that has m = male and f = female values. Swap all f and m values (i.e., change all f values to m and vice versa) with
a single update query and no intermediate temp table.
Id Name Sex Salary
1 A m 2500
2 B f 1500
3 C m 5500
4 D f 500
UPDATE SALARIES SET sex = CASE sex WHEN 'm' THEN 'f' ELSE 'm' END
Write a query to fetch values in table test_a that are and not in test_b without using the NOT keyword.
Note, Oracle does not support the above INSERT syntax, so you would need this instead:
In SQL Server, PostgreSQL, and SQLite, this can be done using the except keyword as follows:
In Oracle, the minus keyword is used instead. Note that if there are multiple columns, say ID and Name, the column should be explicitly stated in Oracle queries:
Select ID from test_a minus select ID from test_b
MySQL does not support the except function. However, there is a standard SQL solution that works in all of the above engines, including MySQL:
select a.id
from test_a a
left join test_b b on a.id = b.id
where b.id is null;
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Given a table TBL with a field Nmbr that has rows with the following values:
1, 0, 0, 1, 1, 1, 1, 0, 0, 1, 0, 1, 0, 1, 0, 1
update TBL set Nmbr = case when Nmbr = 0 then Nmbr+2 else Nmbr+3 end;
Write a SQL query to find the 10th highest employee salary from an Employee table. Explain your answer.
(Note: You may assume that there are at least 10 records in the Employee table.)
First, the SELECT DISTINCT TOP (10) Salary FROM Employee ORDER BY Salary DESC query will select the top 10 salaried employees in the table. However, those
salaries will be listed in descending order. That was necessary for the first query to work, but now picking the top 1 from that list will give you the highest salary not
the the 10th highest salary.
Therefore, the second query reorders the 10 records in ascending order (which the default sort order) and then selects the top record (which will now be the lowest of
those 10 salaries).
Not all databases support the TOP keyword. For example, MySQL and PostreSQL use the LIMIT keyword, as follows:
SELECT Salary FROM
(
SELECT DISTINCT Salary FROM Employee ORDER BY Salary DESC LIMIT 10
) AS Emp ORDER BY Salary LIMIT 1;
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Write a SQL query using UNION ALL (not UNION) that uses the WHERE clause to eliminate duplicates. Why might you want to do this?
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You can avoid duplicates using UNION ALL and still run much faster than UNION DISTINCT (which is actually same as UNION) by running a query like this:
SELECT * FROM mytable WHERE a=X UNION ALL SELECT * FROM mytable WHERE b=Y AND a!=X
The key is the AND a!=X part. This gives you the benefits of the UNION (a.k.a., UNION DISTINCT) command, while avoiding much of its performance hit.
user_id username
1 John Doe
2 Jane Don
3 Alice Jones
4 Lisa Romero
Write a query to to get the list of users who took the a training lesson more than once in the same day, grouped by user and training lesson, each ordered from the
most recent lesson date to oldest date.
SELECT
u.user_id,
username,
training_id,
training_date,
count( user_training_id ) AS count
FROM users u JOIN training_details t ON t.user_id = u.user_id
GROUP BY u.user_id,
username,
training_id,
training_date
HAVING count( user_training_id ) > 1
ORDER BY training_date DESC;
What is an execution plan? When would you use it? How would you view the execution plan?
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View the answer →Hide answer
An execution plan is basically a road map that graphically or textually shows the data retrieval methods chosen by the SQL server’s query optimizer for a stored
procedure or ad hoc query. Execution plans are very useful for helping a developer understand and analyze the performance characteristics of a query or stored
procedure, since the plan is used to execute the query or stored procedure.
In many SQL systems, a textual execution plan can be obtained using a keyword such as EXPLAIN, and visual representations can often be obtained as well. In
Microsoft SQL Server, the Query Analyzer has an option called “Show Execution Plan” (located on the Query drop down menu). If this option is turned on, it will
display query execution plans in a separate window when a query is run.
List and explain each of the ACID properties that collectively guarantee that database transactions are processed reliably.
ACID (Atomicity, Consistency, Isolation, Durability) is a set of properties that guarantee that database transactions are processed reliably. They are defined as
follows:
Atomicity. Atomicity requires that each transaction be “all or nothing”: if one part of the transaction fails, the entire transaction fails, and the database state is
left unchanged. An atomic system must guarantee atomicity in each and every situation, including power failures, errors, and crashes.
Consistency. The consistency property ensures that any transaction will bring the database from one valid state to another. Any data written to the database
must be valid according to all defined rules, including constraints, cascades, triggers, and any combination thereof.
Isolation. The isolation property ensures that the concurrent execution of transactions results in a system state that would be obtained if transactions were
executed serially, i.e., one after the other. Providing isolation is the main goal of concurrency control. Depending on concurrency control method (i.e. if it uses
strict - as opposed to relaxed - serializability), the effects of an incomplete transaction might not even be visible to another transaction.
Durability. Durability means that once a transaction has been committed, it will remain so, even in the event of power loss, crashes, or errors. In a relational
database, for instance, once a group of SQL statements execute, the results need to be stored permanently (even if the database crashes immediately
thereafter). To defend against power loss, transactions (or their effects) must be recorded in a non-volatile memory.
Given a table dbo.users where the column user_id is a unique numeric identifier, how can you efficiently select the first 100 odd user_id values from the table?
(Assume the table contains well over 100 records with odd user_id values.)
SELECT TOP 100 user_id FROM dbo.users WHERE user_id % 2 = 1 ORDER BY user_id
How can you select all the even number records from a table? All the odd number records?
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What are the NVL and the NVL2 functions in SQL? How do they differ?
Both the NVL(exp1, exp2) and NVL2(exp1, exp2, exp3) functions check the value exp1 to see if it is null.
With the NVL(exp1, exp2) function, if exp1 is not null, then the value of exp1 is returned; otherwise, the value of exp2 is returned, but case to the same data type as
that of exp1.
With the NVL2(exp1, exp2, exp3) function, if exp1 is not null, then exp2 is returned; otherwise, the value of exp3 is returned.
What is the difference between the RANK() and DENSE_RANK() functions? Provide an example.
The only difference between the RANK() and DENSE_RANK() functions is in cases where there is a “tie”; i.e., in cases where multiple values in a set have the same
ranking. In such cases, RANK() will assign non-consecutive “ranks” to the values in the set (resulting in gaps between the integer ranking values when there is a tie),
whereas DENSE_RANK() will assign consecutive ranks to the values in the set (so there will be no gaps between the integer ranking values in the case of a tie).
For example, consider the set {25, 25, 50, 75, 75, 100}. For such a set, RANK() will return {1, 1, 3, 4, 4, 6} (note that the values 2 and 5 are skipped), whereas
DENSE_RANK() will return {1,1,2,3,3,4}.
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When GROUP BY is not used, the WHERE and HAVING clauses are essentially equivalent.
The WHERE clause is used to filter records from a result. The filtering occurs before any groupings are made.
The HAVING clause is used to filter values from a group (i.e., to check conditions after aggregation into groups has been performed).
CustomerID CustomerName
1 Prashant Kaurav
2 Ashish Jha
3 Ankit Varma
4 Vineet Kumar
5 Rahul Kumar
Write a single SQL statement to concatenate all the customer names into the following single semicolon-separated string:
Prashant Kaurav; Ashish Jha; Ankit Varma; Vineet Kumar; Rahul Kumar
This is close, but will have an undesired trailing ;. One way of fixing that could be:
SELECT top 1
LTRIM(STUFF((SELECT '; ' + c1.CustomerName FROM Customer c1 FOR XML PATH ('')), 1, 1,'')) as SSV
from Customer c2;
In PostgreSQL one can also use this syntax to achieve the fully correct result:
SELECT array_to_string(array_agg(CustomerName), '; '::text)
FROM Customer
Given a table Employee having columns empName and empId, what will be the result of the SQL query below?
select empName from Employee order by 2 desc;
“Order by 2” is only valid when there are at least two columns being used in select statement. However, in this query, even though the Employee table has 2 columns,
the query is only selecting 1 column name, so “Order by 2” will cause the statement to throw an error while executing the above sql query.
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What will be the output of the below query, given an Employee table having 10 records?
BEGIN TRAN
TRUNCATE TABLE Employees
ROLLBACK
SELECT * FROM Employees
This query will return 10 records as TRUNCATE was executed in the transaction. TRUNCATE does not itself keep a log but BEGIN TRANSACTION keeps track of the TRUNCATE
command.
1. Single-row functions work with single row at a time. Multiple-row functions work with data of multiple rows at a time.
2. The group by clause combines all those records that have identical values in a particular field or any group of fields.
When stored in a database, varchar2 uses only the allocated space. E.g. if you have a varchar2(1999) and put 50 bytes in the table, it will use 52 bytes.
But when stored in a database, char always uses the maximum length and is blank-padded. E.g. if you have char(1999) and put 50 bytes in the table, it will consume
2000 bytes.
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C
A
P
O
N
E
Declare @a nvarchar(100)='capone';
Declare @length INT;
Declare @i INT=1;
SET @lenght=LEN(@a)
while @i<=@length
BEGIN
print(substring(@a,@i,1));
set @i=@i+1;
END
ID
----
1
2
3
4
5
(5 rows)
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5
10
15
Table is as follows:
ID C1 C2 C3
Print the rows which have ‘Yellow’ in one of the columns C1, C2, or C3, but without using OR.
Write a query to insert/update Col2’s values to look exactly opposite to Col1’s values.
Col1 Col2
1 0
0 1
0 1
0 1
1 0
0 1
1 0
1 0
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update table set col2 = case when col1 = 1 then 0 else 1 end
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update table set col2 = 1 - col1
In MySQL:
select id from table order by id desc limit 1
In SQL Server:
IN:
EXISTS:
Now the client wants to insert a record after the identity value 7 with its identity value starting from 10.
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Yes, it is possible, using a DBCC command:
create table tableA
(id int identity,
name nvarchar(50)
)
insert into tableA values ('ram')
insert into tableA values ('rahim')
insert into tableA values ('roja')
insert into tableA values ('rahman')
insert into tableA values ('rani')
insert into tableA values ('raja')
insert into tableA values ('raga')
select * From tableA
DBCC CHECKIDENT(tableA,RESEED,9)
insert into tableA values ('roli')
insert into tableA values ('rosy')
insert into tableA values ('raka')
insert into tableA values ('rahul')
insert into tableA values ('rihan')
insert into tableA values ('bala')
insert into tableA values ('gala')
How can you use a CTE to return the fifth highest (or Nth highest) salary from a table?
Declare @N int
set @N = 5;
WITH CTE AS
(
SELECT Name, Salary, EmpID, RN = ROW_NUMBER()
OVER (ORDER BY Salary DESC)
FROM Employee
)
SELECT Name, Salary, EmpID
FROM CTE
WHERE RN = @N
Imagine a single column in a table that is populated with either a single digit (0-9) or a single character (a-z, A-Z). Write a SQL query to print ‘Fizz’ for a numeric
value or ‘Buzz’ for alphabetical value for all values in that column.
Example:
…should output:
SELECT col, case when upper(col) = lower(col) then 'Fizz' else 'Buzz' end as FizzBuzz from table;
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How do you get the Nth-highest salary from the Employee table without a subquery or CTE?
This will give the third-highest salary from the Employee table. Accordingly we can find out Nth salary using LIMIT (N-1),1.
x
------
2
-2
4
-4
-3
0
2
Write a single query to calculate the sum of all positive values of x and he sum of all negative values of x.
select sum(case when x>0 then x else 0 end)sum_pos,sum(case when x<0 then x else 0 end)sum_neg from a;
weight
5.67
34.567
365.253
34
weight kg gms
5.67 5 67
34.567 34 567
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weight kg gms
34 34 0
View the answer →Hide answer
10 Anil 50000 18
11 Vikas 75000 16
12 Nisha 40000 18
13 Nidhi 60000 17
14 Priya 80000 18
15 Mohit 45000 18
16 Rajesh 90000 –
17 Raman 55000 16
18 Santosh 65000 17
16 Rajesh 65000
17 Raman 62500
18 Santosh 53750
View the answer →Hide answer
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Find the SQL statement below that is equal to the following: SELECT name FROM customer WHERE state = 'VA';
* There is more to interviewing than tricky technical questions, so these are intended merely as a guide. Not every “A” candidate worth hiring will be able to answer
them all, nor does answering them all guarantee an “A” candidate. At the end of the day, hiring remains an art, a science — and a lot of work.
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