Calculating New Values

Objectives

  • Write queries that calculate new values for each selected record.

After carefully re-reading the expedition logs, we realize that the radiation measurements they report may need to be corrected upward by 5%. Rather than modifying the stored data, we can do this calculation on the fly as part of our query:

%load_ext sqlitemagic
%%sqlite survey.db
select 1.05 * reading from Survey where quant='rad';
10.311
8.19
8.8305
7.581
4.5675
2.2995
1.533
11.8125

When we run the query, the expression 1.05 * reading is evaluated for each row. Expressions can use any of the fields, all of usual arithmetic operators, and a variety of common functions. (Exactly which ones depends on which database manager is being used.) For example, we can convert temperature readings from Fahrenheit to Celsius and round to two decimal places:

%%sqlite survey.db
select taken, round(5*(reading-32)/9, 2) from Survey where quant='temp';
734-29.72
735-32.22
751-28.06
752-26.67

We can also combine values from different fields, for example by using the string concatenation operator ||:

%%sqlite survey.db
select personal || ' ' || family from Person;
William Dyer
Frank Pabodie
Anderson Lake
Valentina Roerich
Frank Danforth

It may seem strange to use personal and family as field names instead of first and last, but it's a necessary first step toward handling cultural differences. For example, consider the following rules:

Full Name Alphabetized Under Reason
Liu Xiaobo Liu Chinese family names come first
Leonardo da Vinci Leonardo "da Vinci" just means "from Vinci"
Catherine de Medici Medici family name
Jean de La Fontaine La Fontaine family name is "La Fontaine"
Juan Ponce de Leon Ponce de Leon full family name is "Ponce de Leon"
Gabriel Garcia Marquez Garcia Marquez double-barrelled Spanish surnames
Wernher von Braun von or Braun depending on whether he was in Germany or the US
Elizabeth Alexandra May Windsor Elizabeth monarchs alphabetize by the name under which they reigned
Thomas a Beckett Thomas and saints according to the names by which they were canonized

Clearly, even a two-part division into "personal" and "family" isn't enough...

Challenges

  1. After further reading, we realize that Valentina Roerich was reporting salinity as percentages. Write a query that returns all of her salinity measurements from the Survey table with the values divided by 100.

  2. The union operator combines the results of two queries:

%%sqlite survey.db
select * from Person where ident='dyer' union select * from Person where ident='roe';
dyerWilliamDyer
roeValentinaRoerich

Use union to create a consolidated list of salinity measurements in which Roerich's, and only Roerich's, have been corrected as described in the previous challenge. The output should be something like:

619 0.13
622 0.09
734 0.05
751 0.1
752 0.09
752 0.416
837 0.21
837 0.225
  1. The site identifiers in the Visited table have two parts separated by a '-':
%%sqlite survey.db
select distinct site from Visited;
DR-1
DR-3
MSK-4

Some major site identifiers are two letters long and some are three. The "in string" function instr(X, Y) returns the 1-based index of the first occurrence of string Y in string X, or 0 if Y does not exist in X. The substring function substr(X, I) returns the substring of X starting at index I. Use these two functions to produce a list of unique major site identifiers. (For this data, the list should contain only "DR" and "MSK").

Key Points

  • SQL can perform calculations using the values in a record as part of a query.