Specifying selection criteria

You can enter selection criteria in the grid to specify which rows to retrieve. For example, instead of retrieving data about all employees, you might want to limit the data to employees in Sales and Marketing, or to employees in Sales who make more than $80,000.

As you specify selection criteria, PowerBuilder builds a WHERE clause for the SELECT statement.

StepsTo specify selection criteria:

  1. Click the Criteria row below the first column for which you want to select the data to retrieve.

  2. Enter an expression, or if the column has an edit style, select or enter a value.

    If the column is too narrow for the criterion, drag the grid line to enlarge the column. This enlargement does not affect the column size in a DataWindow object.

  3. Enter additional expressions until you have specified the data you want to retrieve.

NoteAbout edit styles If a column has an edit style associated with it in the extended attribute system tables (that is, the association was made in the Database painter), if possible, the edit style is used in the grid. Drop-down list boxes are used for columns with code tables and columns using the CheckBox and RadioButton edit styles.

SQL operators supported in Quick Select

You can use these SQL relational operators in the retrieval criteria:

Table 18-3: SQL relational operators used in retrieval criteria

Operator

Meaning

=

Is equal to (default operator)

>

Is greater than

<

Is less than

< >

Is not equal to

> =

Is greater than or equal to

< =

Is less than or equal to

LIKE

Matches this pattern

NOT LIKE

Does not match this pattern

IN

Is in this set of values

NOT IN

Is not in this set of values

Because = is the default operator, you can enter the value 100 instead of = 100, or the value New Hampshire instead of = New Hampshire.

Comparison operators

You can use the LIKE, NOT LIKE, IN, and NOT IN operators to compare expressions.

Use LIKE to search for strings that match a predetermined pattern. Use NOT LIKE to find strings that do not match a predetermined pattern. When you use LIKE or NOT LIKE, you can use wildcards:

Use IN to compare and include a value that is in a set of values. Use NOT IN to compare and include values that are not in a set of values. For example, the following clause selects all employees in department 100, 200, or 500:

SELECT * from employee
WHERE dept_id IN (100, 200, 500)

Using NOT IN in this clause would exclude employees in those departments.

Connection operators

You can use the OR and AND logical operators to connect expressions.

PowerBuilder makes some assumptions based on how you specify selection criteria. When you specify:

To override these defaults, begin an expression with the AND or OR operator:

Operator

Meaning

OR

The row is selected if one expression OR another expression is true

AND

The row is selected if one expression AND another expression are true

This technique is particularly handy when you want to retrieve a range of values in a column. See example 6 below.