Differences between revisions 25 and 30 (spanning 5 versions)
Revision 25 as of 2019-09-04 18:15:57
Size: 8713
Editor: JakeGordon
Comment:
Revision 30 as of 2021-09-13 20:03:44
Size: 8713
Editor: JakeGordon
Comment:
Deletions are marked like this. Additions are marked like this.
Line 19: Line 19:
Avoid using the phrase, "all the [information/data/columns] from biograph and members", in your answer. Yes "select * " does that, but we're asking you to describe what information all these columns actually provides. Please don't say "all the [information/data/columns] from biograph and members", in your answer. Yes, "select * from biograph" does that, but that could also be described as "A list of all individuals". For the above query, it returns a list of...what?
Line 23: Line 23:
5. ''You are running a query to find all grooming events on adult males between 2000 and 2009, inclusive, organizable by year and the male’s age, but your query is hanging up in Babase (because you forgot to use limit 100). After you ask a Babase administrator to kill your query, you need to figure out what is wrong. Add a line to the query to fix it.'' 5. ''You are running a query to find all grooming events on adult males between 2000 and 2008, inclusive, organizable by year and the male’s age, but your query is hanging up in Babase (because you forgot to use limit 100). After you ask a Babase administrator to kill your query, you need to figure out what is wrong. Add a line to the query to fix it.''
Line 156: Line 156:
Now write a query using aliases that will provide the minimum, maximum, mean, and standard error for age at maturity of males and females (in years with separate means for males and females but using only one query you’ll need to use “group by”) baboons born in wild-feeding study groups (hint: matgrp < 3) whose birthdate and maturedate are both known to within a few weeks (hint: pay attention to the bstatus and mstatus columns). Be sure to name the output columns by placing “as column_name” at the end of each row that’s doing math for you. How do the results compare if you don’t constrain the results by matgrp, bstatus, and mstatus? (Hint:  You’ll need biograph and maturedates.) Now write a query using aliases that will provide the minimum, maximum, mean, and standard error for age (in years) at maturity of males and females, with separate rows for males and females but using only one query (you’ll need to use “group by”). Include only baboons born in wild-feeding study groups whose birth date is both known to within a few weeks and whose maturedate is known (hint: pay attention to the matgrp, bstatus, and mstatus columns). Be sure to name the output columns by placing “as column_name” at the end of each row that’s doing math for you. How do the results compare if you don’t constrain the results by matgrp, bstatus, and mstatus? (Hint: you’ll need biograph and maturedates.) (Another hint: "wild-feeding" = "grp < 3")
Line 158: Line 158:
9. Write a query that will create a list of all adult males who have ever lived in a wild-feeding study group. Include the male’s sname, birthdate, the date he attained adult rank, his statdate, his biograph "status" (alive, dead, or censored), and a count of all offspring the male is known to have sired (be sure to include adult males who have no known offspring!). (Hint: You’ll need biograph, rankdates, and parents.) (Another hint: to get all the males who have ever lived in a wild-feeding study group, you'll need to use a subquery that involves another table, i.e. not biograph, rankdates, or parents.) 9. Write a query that will create a list of all adult males who have ever lived in a wild-feeding study group. Include the male’s sname, birthdate, the date he attained adult rank, his statdate, his biograph "status" (alive, dead, or censored), and a count of all offspring the male is known to have sired (be sure to include adult males who have no known offspring!). (Hint: You’ll need biograph, rankdates, and parents.) (Another hint: to get all the males who have ever lived in a wild-feeding study group, you'll need to use a subquery that involves one or more other tables, i.e. not biograph, rankdates, nor parents.)
Line 162: Line 162:
 . a. Write a query that shows the boundaries for each fission and includes last_reg_census (for determination of whether or not a group was actually ever a study group).  . a. Write a query that shows the boundaries for each fission.

This quiz was created by Karl O. Pinc, Susan C. Alberts and Niki H. Learn. Questions originally compiled by Lacey Roerish and later revised by Niki H. Learn and Jake Gordon.

You may not pass go, you may not collect 200 dollars at the gates of Babase until you have successfully completed this quiz.

1. What does ending your query with “limit 100” do and when should you use this statement?

2. Write a query that returns all the information in biograph about offspring of the female named PLUM in birth order. (Hint: Don’t order by pid – pids may not match parity and 10 through 19 will organize themselves between 1 and 2.)

3. What data will this query return?

select * from biograph, members
            where matgrp = grp and
                  biograph.sname = members.sname and
                  sex = 'M' and
                  status = 0 and
                  dcause = 0 and
                  statdate = date
            order by matgrp, pid;

Please don't say "all the [information/data/columns] from biograph and members", in your answer. Yes, "select * from biograph" does that, but that could also be described as "A list of all individuals". For the above query, it returns a list of...what?

4. Write a query whose result shows each individual’s short name, birth date, status of their birthdate estimate, their year of birth, maturedate, and whether their maturedate is an “on” or a “by” date, and that will write that table to your own schema in a table called “temptable”, and will order it by the individual’s name. The table should return only females, and only ones that actually have a mature date. (Hint: You'll need biograph and maturedates.)

5. You are running a query to find all grooming events on adult males between 2000 and 2008, inclusive, organizable by year and the male’s age, but your query is hanging up in Babase (because you forgot to use limit 100). After you ask a Babase administrator to kill your query, you need to figure out what is wrong. Add a line to the query to fix it.

select *, (actor_actees.date - biograph.birth)/365.25 as male_age
  from actor_actees
  join ranks
    on ranks.grp = actor_actees.actee_grp
  join rankdates
    on rankdates.sname = actor_actees.actee
  join biograph
    on biograph.sname = actor_actees.actee
where actor_actees.date >= '2000-01-01' and
       actor_actees.date <= '2008-12-31' and
       actor_actees.date >= rankdates.ranked and
       rnkdate(actor_actees.date) = ranks.rnkdate and
       actor_actees.act = 'G' and
       ranks.rnktype = 'ALM'
order by actor_actees.date;

6. You are looking for all conceptions that have occurred since the beginning of hydrological year 2000 (i.e., since 1 Nov 1999). This time you remembered to use “limit 100” and don’t have to have your query killed but the output is clearly wrong – when Babase finally spits out an answer, all 100 rows returned by the query are about one conception. Add a line to fix the query.

select mtd_cycles.sname
     , mtd_cycles.ddate
     , extract(year from mtd_cycles.ddate) as year
     , hydroyear(mtd_cycles.ddate) as hydroyr
     , extract(month from mtd_cycles.ddate) as month
     , pregs.pid
     , pregs.resume
     , members.grp
  from mtd_cycles
  join pregs
    on pregs.conceive = mtd_cycles.dcpid
  join members
    on members.sname = mtd_cycles.sname
where mtd_cycles.ddate > '1999-10-31'
order by ddate
limit 100;

7.

  • a. What data will this query return?

select * from biograph, members
where matgrp = grp and
biograph.sname = members.sname and
sex = 'M' and
status = 0 and
dcause = 0 and
statdate = date
order by matgrp, pid;
  • b. What data will this query return?

select * from biograph, members
where biograph.matgrp = members.grp and
biograph.sname = members.sname and
biograph.sex = 'M' and
biograph.status = 0 and
biograph.dcause = 0 and
biograph.statdate = members.date
order by biograph.matgrp, biograph.pid;
  • c. What data will this query return?

select *
  from biograph
       join members on (biograph.matgrp = members.grp and
                        biograph.sname = members.sname)
   where biograph.sex = 'M' and
         biograph.status = 0 and
         biograph.dcause = 0 and
         biograph.statdate = members.date
   order by biograph.matgrp, biograph.pid;
  • d. What data will this query return?

-- This is an illustrative query used in the Babase Quiz
-- This is how you can write notes about the query to yourself within the query.
SELECT *
  FROM biograph
       JOIN members ON (biograph.matgrp = members.grp AND
                        biograph.sname = members.sname)
  WHERE biograph.sex = 'M' AND   --  M means male (tricky 'eh?)
        biograph.status = 0 AND
        biograph.dcause = 0 AND
        biograph.statdate = members.date
  ORDER BY biograph.matgrp, biograph.pid;
  • e. What are the pros and cons of the various queries above. Which do you prefer?

8. Here’s another option, which may be especially helpful for longer queries – you can "alias" the tables. As an example, let’s rewrite the query from question 6 using aliases.

Instead of:

from mtd_cycles, pregs, members

You can say:

from mtd_cycles as mc, pregs as p, members as m

Or simply:

from mtd_cycles mc, pregs p, members m

Then you can rewrite the query from question 6 as follows: (this query has not been fixed by the answer to #6, so don't run this query unless you've fixed it first!)

select mc.sname
     , mc.ddate
     , extract(year from mc.ddate) as year
     , hydroyear(mc.ddate) as hydroyr
     , extract(month from mc.ddate) as month
     , p.pid
     , p.resume
     , m.grp
  from mtd_cycles mc
  join pregs p
    on p.conceive = mc.dcpid
  join members m
    on m.sname = mc.sname
  where mc.ddate > '1999-10-31'
  order by mc.ddate limit 100;

When you give the tables aliases, you can name them whatever you want; you don't HAVE to pick the first letter of the table like in the example above.

Now write a query using aliases that will provide the minimum, maximum, mean, and standard error for age (in years) at maturity of males and females, with separate rows for males and females but using only one query (you’ll need to use “group by”). Include only baboons born in wild-feeding study groups whose birth date is both known to within a few weeks and whose maturedate is known (hint: pay attention to the matgrp, bstatus, and mstatus columns). Be sure to name the output columns by placing “as column_name” at the end of each row that’s doing math for you. How do the results compare if you don’t constrain the results by matgrp, bstatus, and mstatus? (Hint: you’ll need biograph and maturedates.) (Another hint: "wild-feeding" = "grp < 3")

9. Write a query that will create a list of all adult males who have ever lived in a wild-feeding study group. Include the male’s sname, birthdate, the date he attained adult rank, his statdate, his biograph "status" (alive, dead, or censored), and a count of all offspring the male is known to have sired (be sure to include adult males who have no known offspring!). (Hint: You’ll need biograph, rankdates, and parents.) (Another hint: to get all the males who have ever lived in a wild-feeding study group, you'll need to use a subquery that involves one or more other tables, i.e. not biograph, rankdates, nor parents.)

10. You’re interested in creating grooming networks for groups six months before, during, and six months after each fission but you need to know which fissions have grooming data consistently throughout the periods you are looking at. (Hint: See the technical specifications for the groups_history view and the behave_gaps table. http://papio.biology.duke.edu/babase_system_html/)

  • a. Write a query that shows the boundaries for each fission.
  • b. What table or view should you use to check whether there are any substantial chunks of time within your pre-fission, fission, and post-fission periods when grooming data might be systematically sparse or lacking? Do you see any such periods of time?
  • c. Write a query that checks how dense grooming data are during at least one of the periods of time for a group, identified in your answer to part b.


QuizAnswers


There are additional quiz and quiz-like questions available that are more illustrative of real-world queries.

BabaseQuiz (last edited 2024-12-19 14:50:19 by JakeGordon)

Wiki content based upon work supported by the National Science Foundation under Grant Nos. 0323553 and 0323596. Any opinions, findings, conclusions or recommendations expressed in this material are those of the wiki contributor(s) and do not necessarily reflect the views of the National Science Foundation.