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I have a table with 4 columns. The first column is unique for each row, but it's a string (URL format). I want to update my table, but instead of using "WHERE", I want to update the rows in order. The first query will update the first row, the second query updates the second row and so on.

What's the SQL code for that? I'm using Sqlite.

Edit: My table schema

CREATE table (
url varchar(150),
views int(5),
clicks int(5)
)

Edit2: What I'm doing right now is a loop of SQL queries

update table set views = 5, click = 10 where url = "http://someurl.com";

There is around 4 million records in the database. It's taking around 16 seconds in my server to make the update. Since the loop update the row in order, so the first query update the first row; I'm thinking if updating the rows in order could be faster than using the WHERE clause which needs to browse 4 million rows.

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    You seriously need to post a DDL. But it appears that you are not approaching a solution the right way. Mar 20, 2012 at 14:49
  • I added it. It's pretty simple.
    – Omar Abid
    Mar 20, 2012 at 14:52
  • More details please. In order of what? Which column? What is the nature of a process that wants to go row by row like that? What are you trying to actually do or why? Mar 20, 2012 at 14:54
  • You need to explain some more what you are trying to achieve. For instance show and example of the contents of the table before and after the update(s)..
    – barsju
    Mar 20, 2012 at 14:55
  • 1
    In standard SQL, rows don't have an order within a table - they are to be treated, for all intents and purposes, as a set. Mar 20, 2012 at 14:56

1 Answer 1

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You can't do what you want without using WHERE as this is the only way to select rows from a table for reading, updating or deleting. So you will want to use:

UPDATE table SET url = ... WHERE url = '<whatever>'

HOWEVER... SqlLite has an extra feature - the autogenerated column, ROWID. You can use this column in queries. You don't see this data by default, so if you want the data within it you need to explicitly request it, e.g:

SELECT ROWID, * FROM table

What this means is that you may be able to do what you want referencing this column directly:

UPDATE table SET url = ... WHERE ROWID = 1

you still need to use the WHERE clause, but this allows you to access the rows in insert order without doing anything else.

CAVEAT
ROWID effectively stores the INSERT order of the rows. If you delete rows from the table, the ROWIDs for remaining rows will NOT change - hence it is possible to have gaps in the ROWID sequence. This is by design and there is no workaround short of re-creating the table and re-populating the data.

PORTABILITY
Note that this only applies to SQLite - you may not be able to do the same thing with other SQL engines should you ever need to port this. It would be MUCH better to add an EXPLICIT auto-number column (aka an IDENTITY field) that you can use and manage.

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  • Thanks for the ROWID solution, what I was looking for. I hope it has some performance boosts :)
    – Omar Abid
    Mar 20, 2012 at 15:09

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