Is there an ANSI SQL alternative to the MYSQL LIMIT keyword?

The LIMIT keyword limits the number of rows returned by a SELECT e.g:

SELECT * FROM People WHERE Age > 18 LIMIT 2;

returns 2 rows.

SELECT * FROM People WHERE Age > 18 LIMIT 10, 2;

returns 2 rows after the first 10.

link|improve this question

Um... Those of us who know Ansi SQL may be able to help you if you told us what the MySql LIMIT keyword did... – James Curran Feb 27 '09 at 15:07
James, SELECT * FROM table LIMIT x returns the first x results, and SELECT * FROM table LIMIT x, y returns y results with an offset of x. – Aistina Feb 27 '09 at 15:09
@Aistina: Huh. I didn't know the LIMIT x, y version -- very handy! – Ben Feb 27 '09 at 15:10
1  
LIMIT [x, ]y also works on Postgres. – bobince Feb 27 '09 at 17:14
1  
Worth pointing out that the LIMIT x, y form still has to go over all the earlier rows, so it's not usually much faster than the other syntax (and can still be very slow for high limits). – Paul McMillan Aug 20 '10 at 21:06
show 1 more comment
feedback

6 Answers

up vote 11 down vote accepted

this shows the different ways:

DB2 -- select * from table fetch first 10 rows only 
Informix -- select first 10 * from table 
Microsoft SQL Server and Access -- select top 10 * from table 
MySQL and PostgreSQL -- select * from table limit 10 
Oracle -- select * from (select * from table) where rownum <= 10
link|improve this answer
2  
I've always thought it was ridiculous that Oracle makes you do a subselect to do it this way, but the rownum property is assigned prior to reordering with ORDER BY. – Powerlord Feb 27 '09 at 15:15
'oraclese' has its pros and cons eh? I do like Oracle's join shorthand (+) for an outer join... – jle Feb 27 '09 at 15:22
+1 nice summary! SQLite supports LIMIT, like MySQL/PostgreSQL. InterBase/Firebird support SELECT FIRST and SKIP, like Informix. – Bill Karwin Feb 27 '09 at 18:03
feedback

Not in SQL:1999.

There are two possible approaches you can use in later standards, with generally low levels of support in today's DBMSs.

In SQL:2008 you can use the DB/2 syntax:

SELECT * FROM things
ORDER BY smell
FETCH FIRST n ROWS ONLY

This only works for “LIMIT n” and not the extended “LIMIT m, n” offset syntax. In SQL:2003 you can use window functions, which can support the extended syntax but is a super PITA:

SELECT * FROM (
    SELECT *, ROW_NUMBER() OVER (ORDER BY smell) AS rn,
    FROM things
)
WHERE rn<=n -- or rn BETWEEN m+1 AND m+n

You will more usually use the DBMS-specific methods today.

link|improve this answer
feedback

I don't believe so. All the databases that I'm aware of use vendor-specific keywords for that functionality.

link|improve this answer
feedback

Adding to @jle's answer:

  • SQLite supports LIMIT (MySQL/PostgreSQL)
  • InterBase/Firebird support SELECT FIRST and SKIP (like Informix)

Also see http://stackoverflow.com/questions/216673/emulate-mysql-limit-clause-in-microsoft-sql-server-2000

link|improve this answer
feedback

HSQL/H2 uses LIMIT like MySQL

link|improve this answer
feedback

see also http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Select_(SQL)#FETCH_FIRST_clause

SELECT * FROM T LIMIT 10 OFFSET 20  Netezza, MySQL, PostgreSQL (also supports the standard, since version 8.4), SQLite, HSQLDB, H2
SELECT * from T WHERE ROWNUM <= 10  Oracle (also supports the standard, since Oracle8i)
SELECT FIRST 10 * from T    Ingres
SELECT FIRST 10 * FROM T order by a Informix
SELECT SKIP 20 FIRST 10 * FROM T order by c, d  Informix (row numbers are filtered after order by is evaluated. SKIP clause was introduced in a v10.00.xC4 fixpack)
SELECT TOP 10 * FROM T  MS SQL Server, Sybase ASE, MS Access
SELECT TOP 10 START AT 20 * FROM T  Sybase SQL Anywhere (also supports the standard, since version 9.0.1)
SELECT FIRST 10 SKIP 20 * FROM T    Interbase, Firebird
SELECT * FROM T ROWS 20 TO 30   Firebird (since version 2.1)    
SELECT * FROM T
WHERE ID_T > 10 FETCH FIRST 10 ROWS ONLY    DB2
SELECT * FROM T
WHERE ID_T > 20 FETCH FIRST 10 ROWS ONLY    DB2 (new rows are filtered after comparing with key column of table T)
[edit]
link|improve this answer
feedback

Your Answer

 
or
required, but never shown

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.