Usually if you try to retrieve data from a table, you will get the records in the same order in which you have inserted them.
Using the ORDER BY clause, while retrieving the records of a table you can sort the resultant records in ascending or descending order based on the desired column.
Following is the syntax of the ORDER BY clause in PostgreSQL.
SELECT column-list FROM table_name [WHERE condition] [ORDER BY column1, column2, .. columnN] [ASC | DESC];
Assume we have created a table with name CRICKETERS using the following query −
postgres=# CREATE TABLE CRICKETERS ( First_Name VARCHAR(255), Last_Name VARCHAR(255), Age int, Place_Of_Birth VARCHAR(255), Country VARCHAR(255) ); CREATE TABLE postgres=#
And if we have inserted 5 records in to it using INSERT statements as −
postgres=# insert into CRICKETERS values('Shikhar', 'Dhawan', 33, 'Delhi', 'India'); INSERT 0 1 postgres=# insert into CRICKETERS values('Jonathan', 'Trott', 38, 'CapeTown', 'SouthAfrica'); INSERT 0 1 postgres=# insert into CRICKETERS values('Kumara', 'Sangakkara', 41, 'Matale', 'Srilanka'); INSERT 0 1 postgres=# insert into CRICKETERS values('Virat', 'Kohli', 30, 'Delhi', 'India'); INSERT 0 1 postgres=# insert into CRICKETERS values('Rohit', 'Sharma', 32, 'Nagpur', 'India'); INSERT 0 1
Following SELECT statement retrieves the rows of the CRICKETERS table in the ascending order of their age −
postgres=# SELECT * FROM CRICKETERS ORDER BY AGE; first_name | last_name | age | place_of_birth | country ------------+------------+-----+----------------+------------- Virat | Kohli | 30 | Delhi | India Rohit | Sharma | 32 | Nagpur | India Shikhar | Dhawan | 33 | Delhi | India Jonathan | Trott | 38 | CapeTown | SouthAfrica Kumara | Sangakkara | 41 | Matale | Srilanka (5 rows)es:
You can use more than one column to sort the records of a table. Following SELECT statements sort the records of the CRICKETERS table based on the columns age and FIRST_NAME.
postgres=# SELECT * FROM CRICKETERS ORDER BY AGE, FIRST_NAME; first_name | last_name | age | place_of_birth | country ------------+------------+-----+----------------+------------- Virat | Kohli | 30 | Delhi | India Rohit | Sharma | 32 | Nagpur | India Shikhar | Dhawan | 33 | Delhi | India Jonathan | Trott | 38 | CapeTown | SouthAfrica Kumara | Sangakkara | 41 | Matale | Srilanka (5 rows)
By default, the ORDER BY clause sorts the records of a table in ascending order. You can arrange the results in descending order using DESC as −
postgres=# SELECT * FROM CRICKETERS ORDER BY AGE DESC; first_name | last_name | age | place_of_birth | country ------------+------------+-----+----------------+------------- Kumara | Sangakkara | 41 | Matale | Srilanka Jonathan | Trott | 38 | CapeTown | SouthAfrica Shikhar | Dhawan | 33 | Delhi | India Rohit | Sharma | 32 | Nagpur | India Virat | Kohli | 30 | Delhi | India (5 rows)
To retrieve contents of a table in specific order, invoke the execute() method on the cursor object and, pass the SELECT statement along with ORDER BY clause, as a parameter to it.
In the following example, we are creating a table with name and Employee, populating it, and retrieving its records back in the (ascending) order of their age, using the ORDER BY clause.
import psycopg2 #establishing the connection conn = psycopg2.connect( database="mydb", user='postgres', password='password', host='127.0.0.1', port= '5432' ) #Setting auto commit false conn.autocommit = True #Creating a cursor object using the cursor() method cursor = conn.cursor() #Doping EMPLOYEE table if already exists. cursor.execute("DROP TABLE IF EXISTS EMPLOYEE") #Creating a table sql = '''CREATE TABLE EMPLOYEE( FIRST_NAME CHAR(20) NOT NULL, LAST_NAME CHAR(20), AGE INT, SEX CHAR(1), INCOME INT, CONTACT INT)''' cursor.execute(sql) #Populating the table insert_stmt = "INSERT INTO EMPLOYEE (FIRST_NAME, LAST_NAME, AGE, SEX, INCOME, CONTACT) VALUES (%s, %s, %s, %s, %s, %s)" data = [('Krishna', 'Sharma', 26, 'M', 2000, 101), ('Raj', 'Kandukuri', 20, 'M', 7000, 102), ('Ramya', 'Ramapriya', 29, 'F', 5000, 103), ('Mac', 'Mohan', 26, 'M', 2000, 104)] cursor.executemany(insert_stmt, data) conn.commit() #Retrieving specific records using the ORDER BY clause cursor.execute("SELECT * from EMPLOYEE ORDER BY AGE") print(cursor.fetchall()) #Commit your changes in the database conn.commit() #Closing the connection conn.close()
[('Sharukh', 'Sheik', 25, 'M', 8300.0), ('Sarmista', 'Sharma', 26, 'F', 10000.0)]