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274 lines (274 loc) · 9.69 KB
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-- 1a. Display the first and last names of all actors from the table actor.
USE sakila;
SELECT
first_name, last_name
FROM
actor;
-- 1b. Display the first and last name of each actor in a single column in upper case letters. Name the column Actor Name.
SELECT
UPPER(CONCAT(first_name, ' ', last_name)) AS `Actor Name`
FROM
actor;
-- 2a. You need to find the ID number, first name, and last name of an actor, of whom you know only the first name, "Joe." What is one query would you use to obtain this information?
SELECT
actor_id, first_name, last_name
FROM
actor
WHERE
first_name = 'JOE';
-- 2b. Find all actors whose last name contain the letters GEN:
SELECT
actor_id, first_name, last_name
FROM
actor
WHERE
last_name LIKE '%GEN%';
-- 2c. Find all actors whose last names contain the letters LI. This time, order the rows by last name and first name, in that order:
SELECT
actor_id, first_name, last_name
FROM
actor
WHERE
last_name LIKE '%LI%'
ORDER BY last_name , first_name;
-- 2d. Using IN, display the country_id and country columns of the following countries: Afghanistan, Bangladesh, and China:
SELECT
country_id, country
FROM
country
WHERE
country IN ('Afghanistan' , 'Bangladesh', 'China');
-- 3a. You want to keep a description of each actor. You don't think you will be performing queries on a description, so create a column in the table actor named description and use the data type BLOB (Make sure to research the type BLOB, as the difference between it and VARCHAR are significant).
ALTER TABLE actor
ADD COLUMN description blob AFTER last_name;
-- (display results)
SELECT * FROM actor;
-- 3b. Very quickly you realize that entering descriptions for each actor is too much effort. Delete the description column.
ALTER TABLE actor
DROP COLUMN description;
-- (display results)
SELECT * FROM actor;
-- 4a. List the last names of actors, as well as how many actors have that last name.
SELECT
last_name, COUNT(last_name) AS 'last_name_frequency'
FROM
actor
GROUP BY last_name
HAVING `last_name_frequency` >= 1;
-- 4b. List last names of actors and the number of actors who have that last name, but only for names that are shared by at least two actors
SELECT
last_name, COUNT(last_name) AS 'last_name_frequency'
FROM
actor
GROUP BY last_name
HAVING `last_name_frequency` >= 2;
-- 4c. The actor HARPO WILLIAMS was accidentally entered in the actor table as GROUCHO WILLIAMS. Write a query to fix the record.
UPDATE actor
SET
first_name = 'HARPO'
WHERE
first_name = 'GROUCHO'
AND last_name = 'WILLIAMS';
-- (display results)
Select * FROM actor;
-- 4d. Perhaps we were too hasty in changing GROUCHO to HARPO. It turns out that GROUCHO was the correct name after all! In a single query, if the first name of the actor is currently HARPO, change it to GROUCHO.
UPDATE actor
SET
first_name = CASE
WHEN first_name = 'HARPO' THEN 'GROUCHO'
ELSE 'MUCHO GROUCHO'
END
WHERE
actor_id = 172;
-- (display results)
SELECT * FROM actor;
-- 5a. You cannot locate the schema of the address table. Which query would you use to re-create it?
SHOW CREATE TABLE address;
-- (code to recreate table; copy and paste code after running 'SHOW CREATE TABLE address;')
CREATE TABLE IF NOT EXISTS
`address` (
`address_id` smallint(5) unsigned NOT NULL AUTO_INCREMENT,
`address` varchar(50) NOT NULL,
`address2` varchar(50) DEFAULT NULL,
`district` varchar(20) NOT NULL,
`city_id` smallint(5) unsigned NOT NULL,
`postal_code` varchar(10) DEFAULT NULL,
`phone` varchar(20) NOT NULL,
`location` geometry NOT NULL,
`last_update` timestamp NOT NULL DEFAULT CURRENT_TIMESTAMP ON UPDATE CURRENT_TIMESTAMP,
PRIMARY KEY (`address_id`),
KEY `idx_fk_city_id` (`city_id`),
SPATIAL KEY `idx_location` (`location`),
CONSTRAINT `fk_address_city` FOREIGN KEY (`city_id`) REFERENCES `city` (`city_id`) ON UPDATE CASCADE
) ENGINE=InnoDB AUTO_INCREMENT=606 DEFAULT CHARSET=utf8;
-- Hint: https://dev.mysql.com/doc/refman/5.7/en/show-create-table.html
-- 6a. Use JOIN to display the first and last names, as well as the address, of each staff member. Use the tables staff and address:
SELECT
staff.first_name, staff.last_name, address.address
FROM
staff
LEFT JOIN
address ON staff.address_id = address.address_id;
-- 6b. Use JOIN to display the total amount rung up by each staff member in August of 2005. Use tables staff and payment.
SELECT
s.first_name, s.last_name, SUM(p.amount)
FROM
staff AS s
INNER JOIN
payment AS p ON p.staff_id = s.staff_id
WHERE
MONTH(p.payment_date) = 08
AND YEAR(p.payment_date) = 2005
GROUP BY s.staff_id;
-- 6c. List each film and the number of actors who are listed for that film. Use tables film_actor and film. Use inner join.
SELECT
f.title, COUNT(fa.actor_id) AS 'Actors'
FROM
film_actor AS fa
INNER JOIN
film AS f ON f.film_id = fa.film_id
GROUP BY f.title
ORDER BY Actors DESC;
-- 6d. How many copies of the film Hunchback Impossible exist in the inventory system?
SELECT
title, COUNT(inventory_id) AS '# of copies'
FROM
film
INNER JOIN
inventory USING (film_id)
WHERE
title = 'Hunchback Impossible'
GROUP BY title;
-- 6e. Using the tables payment and customer and the JOIN command, list the total paid by each customer. List the customers alphabetically by last name:
SELECT
c.first_name,
c.last_name,
SUM(p.amount) AS 'Total Amount Paid'
FROM
payment AS p
INNER JOIN
customer AS c ON p.customer_id = c.customer_id
GROUP BY c.customer_id
ORDER BY c.last_name;
-- 7a. The music of Queen and Kris Kristofferson have seen an unlikely resurgence. As an unintended consequence, films starting with the letters K and Q have also soared in popularity. Use subqueries to display the titles of movies starting with the letters K and Q whose language is English.
SELECT
title
FROM
film
WHERE
title LIKE 'K%'
OR title LIKE 'Q%'
AND language_id IN (SELECT
language_id
FROM
language
WHERE
name = 'English');
-- 7b. Use subqueries to display all actors who appear in the film Alone Trip.
SELECT
first_name, last_name
FROM
actor
WHERE
actor_id IN (SELECT
actor_id
FROM
film_actor
WHERE
film_id IN (SELECT
film_id
FROM
film
WHERE
title = 'ALONE TRIP'));
-- 7c. You want to run an email marketing campaign in Canada, for which you will need the names and email addresses of all Canadian customers. Use joins to retrieve this information.
SELECT
customer.last_name, customer.first_name, customer.email
FROM
customer
INNER JOIN
customer_list ON customer.customer_id = customer_list.ID
WHERE
customer_list.country = 'Canada';
-- 7d. Sales have been lagging among young families, and you wish to target all family movies for a promotion. Identify all movies categorized as family films.
SELECT
title, c.name
FROM
film f
INNER JOIN
film_category fc ON (f.film_id = fc.film_id)
INNER JOIN
category c ON (c.category_id = fc.category_id)
WHERE
name = 'family';
-- 7e. Display the most frequently rented movies in descending order.
SELECT
title, COUNT(title) AS 'Rentals'
FROM
film
INNER JOIN
inventory ON (film.film_id = inventory.film_id)
INNER JOIN
rental ON (inventory.inventory_id = rental.inventory_id)
GROUP BY title
ORDER BY rentals DESC;
-- 7f. Write a query to display how much business, in dollars, each store brought in.
SELECT
s.store_id, SUM(amount) AS Gross
FROM
payment p
INNER JOIN
rental r ON (p.rental_id = r.rental_id)
INNER JOIN
inventory i ON (i.inventory_id = r.inventory_id)
INNER JOIN
store s ON (s.store_id = i.store_id)
GROUP BY s.store_id;
-- 7g. Write a query to display for each store its store ID, city, and country.
SELECT
store_id, city, country
FROM
store s
INNER JOIN
address a ON (s.address_id = a.address_id)
INNER JOIN
city cit ON (cit.city_id = a.city_id)
INNER JOIN
country ctr ON (cit.country_id = ctr.country_id);
-- 7h. List the top five genres in gross revenue in descending order. (Hint: you may need to use the following tables: category, film_category, inventory, payment, and rental.)
SELECT
SUM(amount) AS 'Total Sales', c.name AS 'Genre'
FROM
payment p
INNER JOIN
rental r ON (p.rental_id = r.rental_id)
INNER JOIN
inventory i ON (r.inventory_id = i.inventory_id)
INNER JOIN
film_category fc ON (i.film_id = fc.film_id)
INNER JOIN
category c ON (fc.category_id = c.category_id)
GROUP BY c.name
ORDER BY SUM(amount) DESC;
-- 8a. In your new role as an executive, you would like to have an easy way of viewing the Top five genres by gross revenue. Use the solution from the problem above to create a view. If you haven't solved 7h, you can substitute another query to create a view.
DROP VIEW IF EXISTS top_five_genres;
CREATE VIEW top_five_genres AS
SELECT
SUM(amount) AS 'Total Sales', c.name AS 'Genre'
FROM
payment p
INNER JOIN
rental r ON (p.rental_id = r.rental_id)
INNER JOIN
inventory i ON (r.inventory_id = i.inventory_id)
INNER JOIN
film_category fc ON (i.film_id = fc.film_id)
INNER JOIN
category c ON (fc.category_id = c.category_id)
GROUP BY c.name
ORDER BY SUM(amount) DESC
LIMIT 5;
-- 8b. How would you display the view that you created in 8a?
SELECT * FROM top_five_genres;
-- 8c. You find that you no longer need the view `top_five_genres`. Write a query to delete it.
DROP VIEW top_five_genres;