This guide is specifically for MySQL syntax.
Learn SQL SELECT Statement with hands-on practice exercises. Each exercise includes the table schema, solution query, expected output, and detailed explanation.
What You'll Practice
These exercises cover SELECT Statement from basic to advanced concepts. Work through each problem to build your SQL skills.
Exercise 1
Question: Write a query to select all columns from the 'employees' table.
Table Schema
CREATE TABLE employees ( id INT PRIMARY KEY, name VARCHAR(100), salary DECIMAL(10,2), department VARCHAR(50), hire_date DATE );
Solution
SELECT * FROM employees;
Expected Output
| id | name | salary | department | hire_date | |---|---|---|---|---| | 1 | John | 50000 | Sales | 2024-01-15 |
Explanation
The asterisk (*) is a wildcard that selects all columns from the specified table. While convenient for exploration, in production code it's better to explicitly list column names.
Exercise 2
Question: Select only the 'name' and 'salary' columns from the 'employees' table.
Table Schema
CREATE TABLE employees ( id INT PRIMARY KEY, name VARCHAR(100), salary DECIMAL(10,2), department VARCHAR(50) );
Solution
SELECT name, salary FROM employees;
Expected Output
| name | salary | |---|---| | John | 50000 | | Jane | 60000 |
Explanation
Explicitly listing column names is a best practice. It improves query performance and makes your code more maintainable.
Exercise 3
Question: Select all employees and add a calculated column showing annual bonus (10% of salary).
Table Schema
CREATE TABLE employees ( id INT PRIMARY KEY, name VARCHAR(100), salary DECIMAL(10,2) );
Solution
SELECT name, salary, salary * 0.10 AS annual_bonus FROM employees;
Expected Output
| name | salary | annual_bonus | |---|---|---| | John | 50000 | 5000 |
Explanation
You can perform calculations in the SELECT clause and use AS to create an alias for the calculated column.
Exercise 4
Question: Select unique department names from the employees table.
Table Schema
CREATE TABLE employees ( id INT PRIMARY KEY, name VARCHAR(100), department VARCHAR(50) );
Solution
SELECT DISTINCT department FROM employees;
Expected Output
| department | |---| | Sales | | Engineering | | Marketing |
Explanation
DISTINCT removes duplicate values from the result set. It's useful for finding unique values in a column.
Exercise 5
Question: Select the first 5 employees ordered by salary descending.
Table Schema
CREATE TABLE employees ( id INT PRIMARY KEY, name VARCHAR(100), salary DECIMAL(10,2) );
Solution
SELECT * FROM employees ORDER BY salary DESC LIMIT 5;
Expected Output
| id | name | salary | |---|---|---| | 3 | Alice | 75000 | | 2 | Bob | 65000 |
Explanation
ORDER BY sorts results (DESC for descending). LIMIT restricts the number of rows returned. This pattern is common for 'top N' queries.
Common Mistakes to Avoid
- Forgetting to use proper syntax for SELECT Statement
- Not considering NULL values in comparisons
- Confusing similar operators or clauses
Related SQL Exercises
Continue practicing with these related topics:
MySQL-Specific Notes
This page covers MySQL syntax. Other databases may have different syntax for similar operations.