You can use an alias to refer to a column in GROUP
BY, ORDER BY, or
HAVING clauses. Aliases can also be used to
give columns better names:
SELECT SQRT(a*b) AS root FROMtbl_nameGROUP BY root HAVING root > 0; SELECT id, COUNT(*) AS cnt FROMtbl_nameGROUP BY id HAVING cnt > 0; SELECT id AS 'Customer identity' FROMtbl_name;
Standard SQL doesn't allow you to refer to a column alias in a
WHERE clause. This restriction is imposed
because when the WHERE code is executed,
the column value may not yet be determined. For example, the
following query is illegal:
SELECT id, COUNT(*) AS cnt FROM tbl_name WHERE cnt > 0 GROUP BY id;
The WHERE statement is executed to
determine which rows should be included in the GROUP
BY part, whereas HAVING is used
to decide which rows from the result set should be used.
