Sorting Query Results
Use the ORDER
BY
clause to order the rows selected by a query. Sorting by position is useful in the following cases:
-
To order by a lengthy select list expression, you can specify its position in the
ORDER
BY
clause rather than duplicate the entire expression. -
For compound queries containing set operators
UNION
,INTERSECT
,MINUS
, orUNION
ALL
, theORDER
BY
clause must specify positions or aliases rather than explicit expressions. Also, theORDER
BY
clause can appear only in the last component query. TheORDER
BY
clause orders all rows returned by the entire compound query.
The ordering method by which Oracle Database sorts character values for the ORDER BY
clause, also known as the collation, is determined for each ORDER BY
clause expression separately using the collation derivation rules.
If the determined collation of an expression is not the collation BINARY
, then the character values are compared linguistically. In this case, they are first transformed to collation keys and then compared like RAW
values. The collation keys are generated implicitly using the same method that the SQL function NLSSORT
uses. Generated collation keys are subject to the same restrictions that are described in "NLSSORT
". As a result of these restrictions, if the initialization parameter MAX_STRING_SIZE
is set to STANDARD
, two values may compare as linguistically equal if they do not differ in the prefix that was used to produce the collation key, even if they differ in the rest of the value. If the parameter's value is EXTENDED
, then the error "ORA-12742: unable to create the collation key
" may be reported under certain circumstances. See the links below for further information on the restrictions.