- MariaDB - Useful Functions
- MariaDB - Backup Loading Methods
- MariaDB - Backup Methods
- MariaDB - SQL Injection Protection
- MariaDB - Managing Duplicates
- MariaDB - Sequences
- MariaDB - Table Cloning
- MariaDB - Temporary Tables
- Indexes & Statistics Tables
- MariaDB - Alter Command
- MariaDB - Transactions
- MariaDB - Regular Expression
- MariaDB - Null Values
- MariaDB - Join
- MariaDB - Order By Clause
- MariaDB - Like Clause
- MariaDB - Delete Query
- MariaDB - Update Query
- MariaDB - Where Clause
- MariaDB - Select Query
- MariaDB - Insert Query
- MariaDB - Drop Tables
- MariaDB - Create Tables
- MariaDB - Data Types
- MariaDB - Select Database
- MariaDB - Drop Database
- MariaDB - Create Database
- MariaDB - Connection
- MariaDB - PHP Syntax
- MariaDB - Administration
- MariaDB - Installation
- MariaDB - Introduction
- MariaDB - Home
MariaDB Useful Resources
Selected Reading
- Who is Who
- Computer Glossary
- HR Interview Questions
- Effective Resume Writing
- Questions and Answers
- UPSC IAS Exams Notes
MariaDB - Order By Clause
The ORDER BY clause, as mentioned in previous discussions, sorts the results of a statement. It specifies the order of the data operated on, and includes the option to sort in ascending (ASC) or descending (DESC) order. On omission of order specification, the default order is ascending.
ORDER BY clauses appear in a wide variety of statements such as DELETE and UPDATE. They always appear at the end of a statement, not in a subquery or before a set function, because they operate on the final resulting table. You also cannot use an integer to identify a column.
Review the general syntax of the ORDER BY clause given below −
SELECT field, field2,... [or column] FROM table_name, table_name2,... ORDER BY field, field2,... ASC[or DESC]
Use an ORDER BY clause either at the command prompt or within a PHP script.
The Command Prompt
At the command prompt, simply use a standard command −
root@ host# mysql -u root -p password; Enter password:******* mysql> use PRODUCTS; Database changed mysql> SELECT * from products_tbl ORDER BY product_manufacturer ASC +-------------+----------------+----------------------+ | ID_number | Nomenclature | product_manufacturer | +-------------+----------------+----------------------+ | 56789 | SuperBlast 400 | LMN Corp | +-------------+----------------+----------------------+ | 67891 | Zoomzoom 5000 | QFT Corp | +-------------+----------------+----------------------+ | 12347 | Orbitron 1000 | XYZ Corp | +-------------+----------------+----------------------+
PHP Script Using Order By Clause
Utipze the mysql_query() function, once again, in statements employing the ORDER BY clause −
<?php $dbhost = localhost:3036 ; $dbuser = root ; $dbpass = rootpassword ; $conn = mysql_connect($dbhost, $dbuser, $dbpass); if(! $conn ) { die( Could not connect: . mysql_error()); } $sql = SELECT product_id, product_name, product_manufacturer, ship_date FROM products_tbl ORDER BY product_manufacturer DESC ; mysql_select_db( PRODUCTS ); $retval = mysql_query( $sql, $conn ); if(! $retval ) { die( Could not get data: . mysql_error()); } while($row = mysql_fetch_array($retval, MYSQL_ASSOC)) { echo "Product ID :{$row[ product_id ]} <br> ". "Name: {$row[ product_name ]} <br> ". "Manufacturer: {$row[ product_manufacturer ]} <br> ". "Ship Date : {$row[ ship_date ]} <br> ". "--------------------------------<br>"; } echo "Fetched data successfully "; mysql_close($conn); ?>
On successful data retrieval, you will see the following output −
Product ID: 12347 Nomenclature: Orbitron 1000 Manufacturer: XYZ Corp Ship Date: 01/01/17 ---------------------------------------------- Product ID: 67891 Nomenclature: Zoomzoom 5000 Manufacturer: QFT Corp Ship Date: 01/01/17 ---------------------------------------------- Product ID: 56789 Nomenclature: SuperBlast 400 Manufacturer: LMN Corp Ship Date: 01/04/17 ---------------------------------------------- mysql> Fetched data successfullyAdvertisements