In this guide, we will explain how to use the MySQL ORDER BY clause with syntax and examples.
Description
The MySQL ORDER BY clause is used to sort the records in your result set.
Syntax
The syntax for the ORDER BY clause in MySQL is:
SELECT expressions FROM tables [WHERE conditions] ORDER BY expression [ ASC | DESC ];
Parameters or Arguments
expressionsThe columns or calculations that you wish to retrieve.tablesThe tables that you wish to retrieve records from. There must be at least one table listed in the FROM clause.WHERE conditionsOptional. The conditions that must be met for the records to be selected.ASCOptional. It sorts the result set in ascending order by expression (default, if no modifier is provider).DESCOptional. It sorts the result set in descending order by expression.
Note
- If the ASC or DESC modifier is not provided in the ORDER BY clause, the results will be sorted by expression in ascending order. This is equivalent to
ORDER BY expression ASC
. - The ORDER BY clause can be used in a SELECT statement, SELECT LIMIT statement, and DELETE LIMIT statement in MySQL.
Example – Sorting without using ASC/DESC attribute
The MySQL ORDER BY clause can be used without specifying the ASC or DESC modifier. When this attribute is omitted from the ORDER BY clause, the sort order is defaulted to ASC or ascending order.
For example:
SELECT city FROM customers WHERE customer_name = 'Apple' ORDER BY city;
This MySQL ORDER BY example would return all records sorted by the city field in ascending order and would be equivalent to the following ORDER BY clause:
SELECT city FROM customers WHERE customer_name = 'Apple' ORDER BY city ASC;
Most programmers omit the ASC attribute if sorting in ascending order.
Example – Sorting in descending order
When sorting your result set in descending order, you use the DESC attribute in your ORDER BY clause as follows:
SELECT last_name, first_name, city FROM contacts WHERE last_name = 'Johnson' ORDER BY city DESC;
This MySQL ORDER BY example would return all records sorted by the city field in descending order.
Example – Sorting by relative position
You can also use the MySQL ORDER BY clause to sort by relative position in the result set, where the first field in the result set is 1. The next field is 2, and so on.
For example:
SELECT last_name, first_name, city FROM contacts WHERE last_name = 'Johnson' ORDER BY 3 DESC;
This ORDER BY would return all records sorted by the city field in descending order, since the city field is in position #3 in the result set and would be equivalent to the following ORDER BY clause:
SELECT last_name, first_name, city FROM contacts WHERE last_name = 'Johnson' ORDER BY city DESC;
Example – Using both ASC and DESC attributes
When sorting your result set using the ORDER BY clause, you can use the ASC and DESC attributes in a single SELECT statement.
For example:
SELECT supplier_city, supplier_state FROM suppliers WHERE supplier_name = 'Microsoft' ORDER BY supplier_city DESC, supplier_state ASC;
This MySQL ORDER BY would return all records sorted by the supplier_city field in descending order, with a secondary sort by supplier_state in ascending order.
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