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SQL Query Completion for Data Exploration
Within the big data tsunami, relational databases and SQL are still there and
remain mandatory in most of cases for accessing data. On the one hand, SQL is
easy-to-use by non specialists and allows to identify pertinent initial data at
the very beginning of the data exploration process. On the other hand, it is
not always so easy to formulate SQL queries: nowadays, it is more and more
frequent to have several databases available for one application domain, some
of them with hundreds of tables and/or attributes. Identifying the pertinent
conditions to select the desired data, or even identifying relevant attributes
is far from trivial. To make it easier to write SQL queries, we propose the
notion of SQL query completion: given a query, it suggests additional
conditions to be added to its WHERE clause. This completion is semantic, as it
relies on the data from the database, unlike current completion tools that are
mostly syntactic. Since the process can be repeated over and over again --
until the data analyst reaches her data of interest --, SQL query completion
facilitates the exploration of databases. SQL query completion has been
implemented in a SQL editor on top of a database management system. For the
evaluation, two questions need to be studied: first, does the completion speed
up the writing of SQL queries? Second , is the completion easily adopted by
users? A thorough experiment has been conducted on a group of 70 computer
science students divided in two groups (one with the completion and the other
one without) to answer those questions. The results are positive and very
promising
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