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Using LIKE and Wildcards

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In DPQL, you can use the LIKE operator in the WHERE clause to check for patterns.

You would use it alongside wildcards:

%  represents any number of characters

_  represents one character


Examples:

1. Tickets from a single email domain

An example of this you could use would be if you wanted to look at all tickets from users under a specific email domain.

The query below wouldn't work as the email address is incomplete:

SELECT Tickets.id, tickets.person.emails.email

FROM tickets

WHERE tickets.person.emails.email = 'deskpro.com'


2. However, if rather than = we use Like and the % wildcard, we can pull all emails that end in deskpro.com

SELECT Tickets.id, tickets.person.emails.email

FROM tickets

WHERE tickets.person.emails.email LIKE '%deskpro.com'


3. Tickets from similar email domains

Similarly, if we wanted to pull all tickets submitted from Deskpro.com and Deskpro.co.uk, we could use the following as the second % would bypass the characters specified after Deskpro:

SELECT Tickets.id, tickets.person.emails.email

FROM tickets

WHERE tickets.person.emails.email LIKE '%deskpro%'


Wildcard Variations

Different wildcard variations that return support@deskpro.com:

WHERE

LIKE

Description

WHERE  person.emails.email

LIKE 'Support%'

Any values that begin with support

WHERE person.emails.email

LIKE '%Deskpro.com'

Any values  that end with deskpro.com

WHERE person.emails.email

LIKE '%Deskpro%'

Any values that contain Deskpro

WHERE person.emails.email

LIKE 's%m'

Any value that starts with S and ends with M 

WHERE person.emails.email

LIKE '_u%'

Any value that has a U in the second position


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