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Resources for creating a World Cup database using PostgreSQL and Bash scripting, as part of the FreeCodeCamp curriculum. The project aims to build a comprehensive database to store and manage information related to the FIFA World Cup, including match results, team statistics, and player data.

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anasrehman/FCC-WorldCup-DB-PSQL-BASH

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World Cup DB using PostGreSQL with BASH Script

Open file solution.txt To follow my terminal command. Solutions divided into several steps :

1. Create Database and connect to it.
2. Create tables as required conditions.
3. Primary Key and Foreign Key assignment.
4. Give executable permission to shell scipt files.
5. Copy & Run shell script files (NOTE : insert data first).
6. Compact queries into worldcup.sql file.

This is the result to complete the World Cup Database project. Instructions for building this project can be found at https://www.freecodecamp.org/learn/relational-database/build-a-world-cup-database-project/ build-a-world-cup-database

Instructions

Follow the instructions and get all the user stories below to pass to finish the project.

You start with several files, one of them is games.csv. It contains a comma-separated list of all games of the final three rounds of the World Cup tournament since 2014; the titles are at the top. It includes the year of each game, the round of the game, the winner, their opponent, and the number of goals each team scored. You need to do three things for this project:

Part 1: Create the database

Log into the psql interactive terminal with psql --username=freecodecamp --dbname=postgres and create your database structure according to the user stories below.

Don't forget to connect to the database after you create it.

Part 2: Insert the data

Complete the insert_data.sh script to correctly insert all the data from games.csv into the database. The file is started for you. Do not modify any of the code you start with. Using the PSQL variable defined, you can make database queries like this: $($PSQL "<query_here>"). The tests have a 20 second limit, so try to make your script efficient. The less you have to query the database, the faster it will be. You can empty the rows in the tables of your database with TRUNCATE TABLE games, teams;

Part 3: Query the database

Complete the empty echo commands in the queries.sh file to produce output that matches the expected_output.txt file. The file has some starter code, and the first query is completed for you. Use the PSQL variable defined to complete rest of the queries. Note that you need to have your database filled with the correct data from the script to get the correct results from your queries. Hint: Test your queries in the psql prompt first and then add them to the script file.

Notes: If you leave your virtual machine, your database may not be saved. You can make a dump of it by entering `pg_dump -cC --inserts -U freecodecamp worldcup

worldcup.sqlin a bash terminal (not the psql one). It will save the commands to rebuild your database inworldcup.sql. The file will be located where the command was entered. If it's anything inside the projectfolder, the file will be saved in the VM. You can rebuild the database by entering psql -U postgres < worldcup.sqlin a terminal where the.sql` file is.

If you are saving your progress on freeCodeCamp.org, after getting all the tests to pass, follow the instructions above to save a dump of your database. Save the worldcup.sql file, as well as the final version of your insert_data.sh and queries.sh files, in a public repository and submit the URL to it on freeCodeCamp.org.

CodeRoad

  1. You should create a database named worldcup.
  2. You should connect to your worldcup database and then create teams and games tables.
  3. Your teams table should have a team_id column that is a type of SERIAL and is the primary key, and a name column that has to be UNIQUE.
  4. Your games table should have a game_id column that is a type of SERIAL and is the primary key, a year column of type INT, and a round column of type VARCHAR.
  5. Your games table should have winner_id and opponent_id foreign key columns that each reference team_id from the teams table.
  6. Your games table should have winner_goals and opponent_goals columns that are type INT.
  7. All of your columns should have the NOT NULL constraint.
  8. Your two script (.sh) files should have executable permissions. Other tests involving these two files will fail until permissions are correct. When these permissions are enabled, the tests will take significantly longer to run.
  9. When you run your insert_data.sh script, it should add each unique team to the teams table. There should be 24 rows.
  10. When you run your insert_data.sh script, it should insert a row for each line in the games.csv file (other than the top line of the file). There should be 32 rows. Each row should have every column filled in with the appropriate info. Make sure to add the correct ID's from the teams table (you cannot hard-code the values).
  11. You should correctly complete the queries in the queries.sh file. Fill in each empty echo command to get the output of what is suggested with the command above it. Only use a single line like the first query. The output should match what is in the expected_output.txt file exactly, take note of the number of decimal places in some of the query results.

Result

Testing

Testing

Submission

Submission

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Resources for creating a World Cup database using PostgreSQL and Bash scripting, as part of the FreeCodeCamp curriculum. The project aims to build a comprehensive database to store and manage information related to the FIFA World Cup, including match results, team statistics, and player data.

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