In MySQL, you can use “Limit n,m”, like this:
select * from sometable order by name limit 20,10
How to do in Oracle?
select * from ( select a.*, ROWNUM rnum from ( <your_query_goes_here, with order by> ) a where ROWNUM <= :MAX_ROW_TO_FETCH ) where rnum >= :MIN_ROW_TO_FETCH
like:
select * from ( select a.*, ROWNUM rnum from ( select * from sometable order by name ) a where ROWNUM <= 30) where rnum >= 20
In SQL Server: http://www.withdata.com/ad/sql-server/the-sql-server-equivalent-for-the-mysql-limit.html .
In DB2: http://www.withdata.com/ad/db2/the-db2-equivalent-for-the-mysql-limit.html .
In Mysql: http://www.withdata.com/ad/mysql/how-to-limit-the-number-of-rows-returned-by-an-mysql-query.html .
In Sqite: http://www.withdata.com/ad/sqlite/how-to-limit-the-number-of-rows-returned-by-an-sqlite-query.html .
In PostgreSQL: http://www.withdata.com/ad/postgresql/how-to-limit-the-number-of-rows-returned-by-an-postgresql-query.html .
You can visit this page for more information: http://stackoverflow.com/questions/470542/how-do-i-limit-the-number-of-rows-returned-by-an-oracle-query-after-ordering
Some Oracle tools you can try: https://www.withdata.com/oracle/