# AP by PN and OPCode Analysis generated on: 4/2/2025 9:56:57 AM --- ## SQL Statement ```sql SELECT AddnlProc.* FROM AddnlProc ORDER BY AddnlProc.PartNumber, AddnlProc.OPCode; ``` ## Dependencies - [[Tables/AddnlProc]] ## Parameters - *None* ## What it does **SQL Query Description** ================================ ### Overview This SQL query retrieves data from a table named `AddnlProc` and sorts the results based on two columns: `PartNumber` and `OPCode`. ### Breakdown #### SELECT Clause ```sql SELECT AddnlProc.* ``` * This clause specifies that all columns (`*`) in the `AddnlProc` table should be included in the query results. * If only specific column names were desired, they would be listed instead of the `*`. #### FROM Clause ```sql FROM AddnlProc ``` * This clause identifies the table from which to retrieve data. In this case, it's the `AddnlProc` table. #### ORDER BY Clause ```sql ORDER BY AddnlProc.PartNumber, AddnlProc.OPCode; ``` * This clause sorts the query results in ascending order based on two columns: * `PartNumber` * `OPCode` * The sorting is done column-by-column, meaning that all rows with the same value for `PartNumber` will be sorted by their corresponding values for `OPCode`. ### Example Use Case This query could be used in an inventory management system to retrieve a list of additional process information (e.g., part numbers and operation codes) from the `AddnlProc` table, sorted alphabetically by part number and then operation code. **Note**: The exact behavior may vary depending on the specific database management system being used, as some may have different syntax for sorting queries. However, this query should provide a general understanding of how to retrieve and sort data using SQL.