45 lines
		
	
	
		
			1.4 KiB
		
	
	
	
		
			Markdown
		
	
	
	
	
	
		
		
			
		
	
	
			45 lines
		
	
	
		
			1.4 KiB
		
	
	
	
		
			Markdown
		
	
	
	
	
	
|   | --- | |||
|  | title: SQL Insert into Statement | |||
|  | --- | |||
|  | ## SQL Insert into Statement
 | |||
|  | 
 | |||
|  | To insert a record in a table you use the `INSERT INTO` statement.  | |||
|  | 
 | |||
|  | You can do it in two ways, if you want to insert values only in some columns, you have to list their names including all mandatory columns.  The syntax is: | |||
|  | 
 | |||
|  | ```sql | |||
|  | INSERT INTO table_name (column1, column2, column3, ...) | |||
|  | VALUES (value1, value2, value3, ...); | |||
|  | ``` | |||
|  | 
 | |||
|  | The other way is inserting values to all columns in the table, it is not necessary to specify the columns names. The syntax is: | |||
|  |   | |||
|  | ```sql | |||
|  | INSERT INTO table_name  | |||
|  | VALUES (value1, value2, value3, ...); | |||
|  | ``` | |||
|  | 
 | |||
|  | Here’s an example inserting a record in the table Person in both ways: | |||
|  | ```sql | |||
|  | INSERT INTO Person | |||
|  | VALUES (1, ‘John Lennon’, ‘1940-10-09’, ‘M’); | |||
|  | ``` | |||
|  | 
 | |||
|  | And | |||
|  | 
 | |||
|  | ```sql | |||
|  | INSERT INTO Person(Id, Name, DateOfBirth, Gender) | |||
|  | VALUES (1, ‘John Lennon’, ‘1940-10-09’, ‘M’); | |||
|  | ``` | |||
|  | 
 | |||
|  | Some SQL versions (for example, MySQL) support inserting multiple rows at once.  For example:  | |||
|  | 
 | |||
|  | ```sql | |||
|  | INSERT INTO Person(Id, Name, DateOfBirth, Gender) | |||
|  | VALUES (1, ‘John Lennon’, ‘1940-10-09’, ‘M’), (2, ‘Paul McCartney’, ‘1942-06-18’, ‘M’), | |||
|  | (3, ‘George Harrison’, ‘1943-02-25’, ‘M’), (4, ‘Ringo Starr’, ‘1940-07-07’, ‘M’) | |||
|  | ``` | |||
|  | 
 | |||
|  | Note that the entire original query remains intact - we simple add on data rows encloded by paranthesis and separated by commas. | |||
|  | 
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