- SAP HANA Tutorial
- SAP HANA - Home
- SAP HANA Introduction
- SAP HANA - Overview
- In-Memory Computing Engine
- SAP HANA - Studio
- Studio Administration View
- SAP HANA - System Monitor
- SAP HANA - Information Modeler
- SAP HANA - Core Architecture
- SAP HANA Modeling
- SAP HANA - Modeling
- SAP HANA - Data Warehouse
- SAP HANA - Tables
- SAP HANA - Packages
- SAP HANA - Attribute View
- SAP HANA - Analytic View
- SAP HANA - Calculation View
- SAP HANA - Analytic Privileges
- SAP HANA - Information Composer
- SAP HANA - Export and Import
- SAP HANA Reporting
- SAP HANA - Reporting View
- Bi 4.0 Connectivity to HANA Views
- SAP HANA - Crystal Reports
- SAP HANA - Excel Integration
- SAP HANA Security
- SAP HANA - Security Overview
- User Administration & Management
- SAP HANA - Authentications
- SAP HANA - Authorization methods
- SAP HANA - License Management
- SAP HANA - Auditing
- SAP HANA Data Replication
- SAP HANA - Data Replication Overview
- SAP HANA - ETL Based Replication
- SAP HANA - Log Based Replication
- SAP HANA - DXC Method
- SAP HANA - CTL Method
- SAP HANA - MDX Provider
- SAP HANA Monitoring
- SAP HANA - Monitoring and Alerting
- SAP HANA - Persistent Layer
- SAP HANA - Backup & Recovery
- SAP HANA - High Availability
- SAP HANA - Log Configuration
- SAP HANA SQL
- SAP HANA - SQL Overview
- SAP HANA - Data Types
- SAP HANA - SQL Operators
- SAP HANA - SQL Functions
- SAP HANA - SQL Expressions
- SAP HANA - SQL Stored Procedures
- SAP HANA - SQL Sequences
- SAP HANA - SQL Triggers
- SAP HANA - SQL Synonym
- SAP HANA - SQL Explain Plans
- SAP HANA - SQL Data Profiling
- SAP HANA - SQL Script
- SAP HANA Useful Resources
- SAP HANA - Questions and Answers
- SAP HANA - Quick Guide
- SAP HANA - Useful Resources
- SAP HANA - Discussion
SAP HANA - SQL Sequences
A sequence is a set of integers 1, 2, 3, that are generated in order on demand. Sequences are frequently used in databases because many applications require each row in a table to contain a unique value, and sequences provide an easy way to generate them.
Using AUTO_INCREMENT column
The simplest way in MySQL to use sequences is to define a column as AUTO_INCREMENT and leave rest of the things to MySQL to take care.
Example
Try out the following example. This will create table and after that it will insert few rows in this table where it is not required to give record ID because it is auto-incremented by MySQL.
mysql> CREATE TABLE INSECT -> ( -> id INT UNSIGNED NOT NULL AUTO_INCREMENT, -> PRIMARY KEY (id), -> name VARCHAR(30) NOT NULL, # type of insect -> date DATE NOT NULL, # date collected -> origin VARCHAR(30) NOT NULL # where collected ); Query OK, 0 rows affected (0.02 sec) mysql> INSERT INTO INSECT (id,name,date,origin) VALUES -> (NULL,'housefly','2001-09-10','kitchen'), -> (NULL,'millipede','2001-09-10','driveway'), -> (NULL,'grasshopper','2001-09-10','front yard'); Query OK, 3 rows affected (0.02 sec) Records: 3 Duplicates: 0 Warnings: 0 mysql> SELECT * FROM INSECT ORDER BY id;
+----+-------------+------------+------------+ | id | name | date | origin | +----+-------------+------------+------------+ | 1 | housefly | 2001-09-10 | kitchen | | 2 | millipede | 2001-09-10 | driveway | | 3 | grasshopper | 2001-09-10 | front yard | +----+-------------+------------+------------+ 3 rows in set (0.00 sec)
Obtain AUTO_INCREMENT Values
LAST_INSERT_ID( ) is a SQL function, so you can use it from within any client that understands how to issue SQL statements. Otherwise, PERL and PHP scripts provide exclusive functions to retrieve auto-incremented value of last record.
PERL Example
Use the mysql_insertid attribute to obtain the AUTO_INCREMENT value generated by a query. This attribute is accessed through either a database handle or a statement handle, depending on how you issue the query. The following example references it through the database handle −
$dbh->do ("INSERT INTO INSECT (name,date,origin) VALUES('moth','2001-09-14','windowsill')"); my $seq = $dbh->{mysql_insertid};
PHP Example
After issuing a query that generates an AUTO_INCREMENT value, retrieve the value by calling mysql_insert_id( ) −
mysql_query ("INSERT INTO INSECT (name,date,origin) VALUES('moth','2001-09-14','windowsill')", $conn_id); $seq = mysql_insert_id ($conn_id);
Renumbering an Existing Sequence
There may be a case when you have deleted many records from a table and you want to re-sequence all the records. This can be done by using a simple trick but you should be very careful to do so if your table is having join, with other table.
If you determine that resequencing an AUTO_INCREMENT column is unavoidable, the way to do it is to drop the column from the table, then add it again. The following example shows how to renumber the id values in the insect table using this technique −
mysql> ALTER TABLE INSECT DROP id; mysql> ALTER TABLE insect -> ADD id INT UNSIGNED NOT NULL AUTO_INCREMENT FIRST, -> ADD PRIMARY KEY (id);
Starting a Sequence at a Particular Value
By default, MySQL will start sequence from 1 but you can specify any other number as well at the time of table creation. Following is the example where MySQL will start sequence from 100.
mysql> CREATE TABLE INSECT -> ( -> id INT UNSIGNED NOT NULL AUTO_INCREMENT = 100, -> PRIMARY KEY (id), -> name VARCHAR(30) NOT NULL, # type of insect -> date DATE NOT NULL, # date collected -> origin VARCHAR(30) NOT NULL # where collected );
Alternatively, you can create the table and then set the initial sequence value with ALTER TABLE.