# Material_Update_8110022_To_8111114 Analysis generated on: 4/2/2025 10:03:06 AM --- ## SQL Statement ```sql UPDATE Process SET Process.MetalType = "8111114" WHERE (((Process.MetalType)="8110022")); ``` ## Dependencies - *None* ## Parameters - *None* ## What it does **SQL Update Statement Description** ===================================== ### Overview The provided SQL update statement modifies specific data in the `Process` table. ### Syntax ```sql UPDATE Process SET Process.MetalType = "8111114" WHERE (((Process.MetalType) = "8110022")); ``` ### Breakdown #### Table Name and Column Name * The table being updated is named `Process`. * The column being modified is also named `MetalType`. #### Update Clause * The keyword `UPDATE` indicates that this statement modifies existing data in the database. * The `SET Process.MetalType = "8111114"` clause specifies the new value for the `MetalType` column. In this case, it updates all records to have a metal type of `"8111114"`. #### WHERE Clause * The keyword `WHERE` is used to specify conditions under which the update should be applied. * The condition `(Process.MetalType) = "8110022"` filters the rows that will be updated. Only records with a current value of `"8110022"` in the `MetalType` column will be affected by this update. #### Subquery * The use of parentheses around the subquery `(Process.MetalType) = "8110022"` indicates that it is an inner subquery, not an aggregate or correlated subquery. This means the outer query can only use the value of `MetalType` once. ### Effectiveness This SQL statement will update all rows in the `Process` table where the current `MetalType` is `"8110022"`, changing its value to `"8111114"`. If there are multiple conditions being applied, this would be an OR operation.