Marketo
SELECT Statements
A SELECT statement can consist of the following basic clauses.
SELECT
INTO
FROM
JOIN
WHERE
GROUP BY
HAVING
UNION
ORDER BY
LIMIT
SELECT Syntax
The following syntax diagram outlines the syntax supported by the SQL engine of the provider:
SELECT
{
[ TOP
<numeric_literal> | DISTINCT
]
{
*
| {
<expression> [ [ AS
] <column_reference> ]
| { <table_name> | <correlation_name> } .*
} [ , ... ]
}
[ INTO
csv:// [ filename= ] <file_path> [ ;delimiter=tab ] ]
{
FROM
<table_reference> [ [ AS
] <identifier> ]
} [ , ... ]
[ [
INNER
| { { LEFT
| RIGHT
| FULL
} [ OUTER
] }
] JOIN
<table_reference> [ ON
<search_condition> ] [ [ AS
] <identifier> ]
] [ ... ]
[ WHERE
<search_condition> ]
[ GROUP
BY
<column_reference> [ , ... ]
[ HAVING
<search_condition> ]
[ UNION
[ ALL
] <select_statement> ]
[
ORDER
BY
<column_reference> [ ASC
| DESC
] [ NULLS FIRST
| NULLS LAST
]
]
[
LIMIT <expression>
[
{ OFFSET | , }
<expression>
]
]
} | SCOPE_IDENTITY()
<expression> ::=
| <column_reference>
| @ <parameter>
| ?
| COUNT( * | { [ DISTINCT
] <expression> } )
| { AVG
| MAX
| MIN
| SUM
| COUNT
} ( <expression> )
| NULLIF
( <expression> , <expression> )
| COALESCE
( <expression> , ... )
| CASE
<expression>
WHEN
{ <expression> | <search_condition> } THEN
{ <expression> | NULL
} [ ... ]
[ ELSE
{ <expression> | NULL
} ]
END
| <literal>
| <sql_function>
<search_condition> ::=
{
<expression> { = | > | < | >= | <= | <> | != | LIKE
| NOT
LIKE
| IN
| NOT
IN
| IS
NULL
| IS
NOT
NULL
| AND
| OR
| CONTAINS
| BETWEEN
} [ <expression> ]
} [ { AND
| OR
} ... ]
Examples
Return all columns:
SELECT * FROM Leads
Rename a column:
SELECT [Email] AS MY_Email FROM Leads
Cast a column's data as a different data type:
SELECT CAST(AnnualRevenue AS VARCHAR) AS Str_AnnualRevenue FROM Leads
Search data:
SELECT * FROM Leads WHERE Email = 'sample@email.com'
Return the number of items matching the query criteria:
SELECT COUNT(*) AS MyCount FROM Leads
Return the number of unique items matching the query criteria:
SELECT COUNT(DISTINCT Email) FROM Leads
Return the unique items matching the query criteria:
SELECT DISTINCT Email FROM Leads
Summarize data:
SELECT Email, MAX(AnnualRevenue) FROM Leads GROUP BY Email
See Aggregate Functions below for details.
Retrieve data from multiple tables.
SELECT l.FirstName, l.LastName, a.LinkURL, a.UserAgent FROM Leads l INNER JOIN Activities_ClickLink a ON l.Id = a.LeadId
See JOIN Queries below for details.
Sort a result set in ascending order:
SELECT Id, Email FROM Leads ORDER BY Email ASC
Restrict a result set to the specified number of rows:
SELECT Id, Email FROM Leads LIMIT 10
Parameterize a query to pass in inputs at execution time. This enables you to create prepared statements and mitigate SQL injection attacks.
SELECT * FROM Leads WHERE Email = @param
Aggregate Functions
COUNT
Returns the number of rows matching the query criteria.
SELECT COUNT(*) FROM Leads WHERE Email = 'sample@email.com'
COUNT(DISTINCT)
Returns the number of distinct, non-null field values matching the query criteria.
SELECT COUNT(DISTINCT Id) AS DistinctValues FROM Leads WHERE Email = 'sample@email.com'
AVG
Returns the average of the column values.
SELECT Email, AVG(AnnualRevenue) FROM Leads WHERE Email = 'sample@email.com'
GROUP BY Email
MIN
Returns the minimum column value.
SELECT MIN(AnnualRevenue), Email FROM Leads WHERE Email = 'sample@email.com'
GROUP BY Email
MAX
Returns the maximum column value.
SELECT Email, MAX(AnnualRevenue) FROM Leads WHERE Email = 'sample@email.com'
GROUP BY Email
SUM
Returns the total sum of the column values.
SELECT SUM(AnnualRevenue) FROM Leads WHERE Email = 'sample@email.com'
JOIN Queries
The Provider for Marketo supports standard SQL joins like the following examples.
Inner Join
An inner join selects only rows from both tables that match the join condition:
SELECT l.FirstName, l.LastName, a.LinkURL, a.UserAgent FROM Leads l INNER JOIN Activities_ClickLink a ON l.Id = a.LeadId
Left Join
A left join selects all rows in the FROM table and only matching rows in the JOIN table:
SELECT l.FirstName, l.LastName, a.LinkURL, a.UserAgent FROM Leads l LEFT JOIN Activities_ClickLink a ON l.Id = a.LeadId
Date Literal Functions
The following date literal functions can be used to filter date fields using relative intervals. Note that while the <, >, and = operators are supported for these functions, <= and >= are not.
L_TODAY()
The current day.
SELECT * FROM MyTable WHERE MyDateField = L_TODAY()
L_YESTERDAY()
The previous day.
SELECT * FROM MyTable WHERE MyDateField = L_YESTERDAY()
L_TOMORROW()
The following day.
SELECT * FROM MyTable WHERE MyDateField = L_TOMORROW()
L_LAST_WEEK()
Every day in the preceding week.
SELECT * FROM MyTable WHERE MyDateField = L_LAST_WEEK()
L_THIS_WEEK()
Every day in the current week.
SELECT * FROM MyTable WHERE MyDateField = L_THIS_WEEK()
L_NEXT_WEEK()
Every day in the following week.
SELECT * FROM MyTable WHERE MyDateField = L_NEXT_WEEK()
Also available:
L_LAST/L_THIS/L_NEXT MONTH
L_LAST/L_THIS/L_NEXT QUARTER
L_LAST/L_THIS/L_NEXT YEAR
L_LAST_N_DAYS(n)
The previous n days, excluding the current day.
SELECT * FROM MyTable WHERE MyDateField = L_LAST_N_DAYS(3)
L_NEXT_N_DAYS(n)
The following n days, including the current day.
SELECT * FROM MyTable WHERE MyDateField = L_NEXT_N_DAYS(3)
Also available:
L_LAST/L_NEXT_90_DAYS
L_LAST_N_WEEKS(n)
Every day in every week, starting n weeks before current week, and ending in the previous week.
SELECT * FROM MyTable WHERE MyDateField = L_LAST_N_WEEKS(3)
L_NEXT_N_WEEKS(n)
Every day in every week, starting the following week, and ending n weeks in the future.
SELECT * FROM MyTable WHERE MyDateField = L_NEXT_N_WEEKS(3)
Also available:
L_LAST/L_NEXT_N_MONTHS(n)
L_LAST/L_NEXT_N_QUARTERS(n)
L_LAST/L_NEXT_N_YEARS(n)
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