----------- ROWS clause ----------- Function: Allow to limit a number of rows retrieved from a select expression. For a highest level select statement, it would mean a number of rows sent to the host program. Author: Dmitry Yemanov <yemanov@yandex.ru> Syntax rules: SELECT ... [ORDER BY <expr_list>] ROWS <expr1> [TO <expr2>] Scope: DSQL, PSQL Example(s): 1. SELECT * FROM T1 UNION ALL SELECT * FROM T2 ORDER BY COL ROWS 10 TO 100 2. SELECT COL1, COL2, ( SELECT COL3 FROM T3 ORDER BY COL4 DESC ROWS 1 ) FROM T4 3. DELETE FROM T5 ORDER BY COL5 ROWS 1 Note(s): 1. ROWS is a more understandable alternative to the FIRST/SKIP clauses with some extra benefits. It can be used in unions and all kind of subqueries. Also it's available in the UPDATE/DELETE statements. 2. When <expr2> is omitted, then ROWS <expr1> is a semantical equivalent for FIRST <expr1>. When both <expr1> and <expr2> are used, then ROWS <expr1> TO <expr2> means: FIRST (<expr2> - <expr1> + 1) SKIP (<expr1> - 1). Note that there's no semantical equivalent for a SKIP clause used without a FIRST clause.