1

I'm curious if there's a way to do a select on a table which is, itself the product of a select. Something (pseudo) along the lines of

    select a,b,c from 
(select id as a, name as b, phone as c, date as d from some_table) 
where  d = now();

So, in effect the parenthetical would return a table, whose columns are defined by the as and then the outer select could go and query that result.

If not exactly this, I'd be curious to know what vaguely analogous approach I could use.

The reason I need this is that I have a fairly extensive pivot query that I run on my user data, and I would love to be able to select from the fairly massive result.

8
  • 1
    What happened when you tried?
    – user330315
    May 22, 2013 at 7:18
  • well... this *exact syntax is just wrong, and the various other stabs at it didn't work, so, I'm wondering what the right approach is, or if it's even possible. May 22, 2013 at 7:19
  • Define "just wrong". All I can see is that the d column is unknown and should be inside the parentheses. May 22, 2013 at 7:21
  • create a view in your first query and then select from that view?
    – hanut
    May 22, 2013 at 7:21
  • right, so... I need that d column to be visible to the outer select, just as it would be if rather than (select stuff) there was an actual table name there. That's the crux of my question. May 22, 2013 at 7:22

2 Answers 2

2

You probably got an error that says something like "derived table needs an alias"

The following works:

select a,b,c 
from (
     select id as a, 
            name as b, 
            phone as c, 
            some_date as d 
     from some_table
) as t 
where  d <= now();

The alias t defines a so called derived table.

SQLFiddle: http://sqlfiddle.com/#!2/05fd6/2

0
1

Yes it is possible. Try this:

select A.a,A.b,A.c from 
(select id as a, name as b, phone as c, date as d from some_table where  d = now()) A

It is called a derived table.

To move the WHERE outside the subquery:

select A.a,A.b,A.c, A.d from 
(select id as a, name as b, phone as c, date as d from some_table) A
where A.d = now()
4
  • No, it's called a "derived table".
    – user330315
    May 22, 2013 at 7:26
  • on what part of the query that creates a table?
    – John Woo
    May 22, 2013 at 7:26
  • this looks very promising... is there a way to move the where out to the outer select? I realize *this example doesn't have any obvious reason for doing so, but in my real world query, I really do need to cull the result down based on some criteria. May 22, 2013 at 7:26
  • @Dr.Dredel I updated my answer with the d outside the derived table. May 22, 2013 at 7:32

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