Views in SQL
Bola Adebesin
Posted on June 30, 2021
What is a View
TLDR: A view is like a query you can save for later.
A view is defined as a mechanism for querying data. I think of it as a way to create a query and save it for later. By creating a view you have access to a specific set of data without creating a new table or taking up space.
How Can I create a View
A view can be created by assigning a name to a select statement and then storing the query for others to use. (Similar to how we can store a value in a variable to use later). Then, other people can use your view to access data as if they were querying an actual table. Sometimes you don't even know you're using a view.
CREATE VIEW customer_vw
AS
SELECT
customer_id,
first_name name,
last_name surname,
concat(substr(email, 1, 2), '*****', substr(email, -4)) email
FROM customer;
The first part of the statement gives the view a name customer_vw
. The second part of the statement is a select statement which must contain one expression for each column in the view.
Once this view is created it can be queried just like a table!
We can also use desc customer_vw
to examine the fields and types that make up the data in the view.
You can join views to other tables too.
Why Use Views
- Data Security - you can use views to mask data you don't want others to see
- Data aggregation - you can use views to preaggregate data so that when others query the view they are querying data that may be more meaningful than just raw data from the database.
- Hiding Complexity
Posted on June 30, 2021
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