[ https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/DERBY-3634?page=com.atlassian.jira.plugin.system.issuetabpanels:all-tabpanel ] Dag H. Wanvik updated DERBY-3634: --------------------------------- Attachment: derby-3634-newimpl-1.txt derby-3634-newimpl-1.stat derby-3634-newimpl-1.diff Uploading a cleaned up version of the last prototype patch. Please see notes in derby-3634-newimpl-1.txt attached for details. This version is fairly close to a committable state, I hope. Comments are much appreciated! > Cannot use row_number() in ORDER BY clause > ------------------------------------------ > > Key: DERBY-3634 > URL: https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/DERBY-3634 > Project: Derby > Issue Type: Bug > Components: SQL > Affects Versions: 10.4.1.3 > Reporter: Rick Hillegas > Assignee: Dag H. Wanvik > Attachments: derby-3634-a.diff, derby-3634-a.stat, derby-3634-a.txt, derby-3634-b.diff, derby-3634-b.stat, derby-3634-c.diff, derby-3634-c.stat, derby-3634-newimpl-1.diff, derby-3634-newimpl-1.stat, derby-3634-newimpl-1.txt, derby-3634-remove-2.diff, derby-3634-remove-2.stat, derby-3634-remove.diff, derby-3634-remove.stat > > > The following query works correctly: > select abs(a), row_number() over () > from t > where a > 100 and a < 111 > order by abs(a) > I expected the following query to also work, but it raised an exception: > select abs(a), row_number() over () > from t > where a > 100 and a < 111 > order by row_number() over () > This is the error I saw: "ERROR 42X01: Syntax error: Encountered "over" at line 5, column 23". > Here are the reasons why I think that this syntax is supposed to be supported: > According to my reading of the 2003 SQL spec, the ORDER BY clause should be able to sort on any expression in the SELECT list. That includes OLAP expressions. I believe this is so because, according to part 2, section 10.10 (), a can be any and if you follow the grammar for , it can resolve to be a (see section 6.3), which can in turn resolve to be a . This reasoning is supported by tracing the hotlinks on the following page which lays out the SQL 2003 BNF: http://savage.net.au/SQL/sql-2003-2.bnf.html This interpretation is further supported by the example of an ORDER BY clause referencing an OLAP expression which is provided on page 23 of the introduction to OLAP written by Fred Zemke, Krishna Kulkarni, Andy Witkowski, and Bob Lyle: www.cse.iitb.ac.in/dbms/Data/Papers-Other/SQL1999/OLAP-99-154r2.pdf -- This message is automatically generated by JIRA. - You can reply to this email to add a comment to the issue online.