5

I have a table in my data base that has three columns: Screen, Icon, and Rank: and i am trying to find the cleanest way to achieve the following..

i want to find all rows WHERE Screen = "myScreen" and Rank >5 // then make rank one less than current value.. I am doing this in Java via a SQLite Manager class in the following function:

public void DeleteScreenIcon (int id, String screenName, int rank){
        int screenID = getScreenID(screenName);
        SQLiteDatabase db=this.getWritableDatabase();
        db.delete(isLookUp, colScreenID + "=" + screenID + " and " +colIconID+ "="+id, null);
        // HERE IS WHERE I NOW WANT TO DO THAT..
        db.execSQL("update "+ isLookUp +" set "+colRank+ "=" +colRank+ " -1 "+" where " + colScreenID +  "='"  +screenName + "' and " + colRank +">" +rank);
        db.close();
    }

sorry, im not that versed in SQL any help is appreciated

3
  • 1
    In SQL, you can simply do Rank=Rank-1 in an update statement.
    – Sjoerd
    Mar 23, 2012 at 13:02
  • I have a similar problem:- ContentValues dataToInsert = new ContentValues(); dataToInsert.put(MARKER_ID, MARKER_ID+"-1"); String where = IMAGE_ID_F+" = " +imageId+ " AND "+MARKER_ID+" > "+markerId+";"; int resultUpdate = db.update(TABLE_DEFECTS, dataToInsert, where, null); Dec 31, 2012 at 9:12
  • The above doesn't seem to work. Dec 31, 2012 at 9:14

1 Answer 1

9

This update should do the trick:

UPDATE myTable 
SET Rank = Rank - 1
WHERE Screen = "myScreen"
AND Rank > 5;
2
  • 1
    thank you was not sure you could use set like that.. AWESOME!
    – erik
    Mar 23, 2012 at 13:08
  • i added a line of code above to my method to reflect your response and wondering if i am formatting this correct in java?
    – erik
    Mar 23, 2012 at 13:24

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