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Is it possible in Cassandra to use multiple conditions union ed together after the where clause in a select statement like in any of the RDBMS. Here is my code :

SELECT * from TABLE_NAME WHERE COND1= 'something' OR COND2 = 'something';  

3 Answers 3

15

Assuming COND is the name of your table's primary key, you can do:

SELECT * from TABLE_NAME WHERE COND1 in ('something', 'something');

So, there is no fully general OR operation, but it looks like this may be equivalent to what you were trying to do.

Remember, as you use CQL, that query planning is not meant to be one of its strengths. Cassandra code typically makes the assumption that you have huge amounts of data, so it will try to avoid doing any queries that might end up being expensive. In the RMDBS world, you structure your data according to intrinsic relationships (3rd normal form, etc), whereas in Cassandra, you structure your data according to the queries you expect to need. Denormalization is (forgive the pun) the norm.

Point is, CQL is intended to be a more familiar, friendly syntax for making Cassandra queries than the older Thrift RPC interface. It's not intended to be completely expressive and flexible the way that SQL is.

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    the paul, I have tried the above statement but its showing error in cql shell stating mismatched input 'IN' expecting set null. Remember In the example COND1 is secondary index.
    – abhi
    May 10, 2012 at 7:05
13

Simple answer: there is no equivalent of OR

http://www.datastax.com/docs/0.8/dml/using_cql

Here is the command reference for v0.8:

http://www.datastax.com/docs/0.8/references/cql#cql-reference

SELECT [FIRST N] [REVERSED] FROM [USING ] [WHERE ] [LIMIT N];

..

The WHERE clause provides for filtering the rows that appear in results. The clause can filter on a key name, or range of keys, and in the case of indexed columns, on column values. Key filters are specified using the KEY keyword, a relational operator, (one of =, >, >=, <, and <=), and a term value. When terms appear on both sides of a relational operator it is assumed the filter applies to an indexed column. With column index filters, the term on the left of the operator is the name, the term on the right is the value to filter on.

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Here is the syntax of CQL v3:

SELECT * | select_expression | DISTINCT partition 
FROM [keyspace_name.] table_name 
[WHERE partition_value
   [AND clustering_filters 
   [AND static_filters]]] 
[ORDER BY PK_column_name ASC|DESC] 
[LIMIT N]
[ALLOW FILTERING]

then you can not use OR operation like SQL.

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