Managing a diversified investment portfolio can quickly become overwhelming. Between stocks, bonds, ETFs, and cryptocurrencies, you may find yourself juggling multiple platforms, spreadsheets, and apps—each with its own limitations. A SQL‑based investment tracking system solves this problem by giving you a centralized, automated, and highly customizable environment to monitor performance like a true professional. This comprehensive guide walks you through how to build your own SQL database, automate data collection, run performance queries, and integrate everything with Excel or Power BI for real‑time dashboards. Why Use SQL to Track Your Investments? Most investors rely on spreadsheets or brokerage dashboards. While useful, they lack flexibility and long‑term scalability. SQL, on the other hand, offers: Centralized data storage for all asset classes Automated updates via scripts or APIs Advanced performance analytics using queries Historical tracking wit...
Appendices: Quick Reference Guides As you venture beyond the core chapters, these appendices become your trusted sidekick. Whether you’re knee-deep in a complex query or refreshing your memory on a particular term, you’ll find everything at your fingertips. 1. SQL Syntax Cheat Sheet A one-page snapshot of essential commands lets you work quickly without hunting through documentation. Keep this section open while you code: Data Definition Language (DDL) CREATE TABLE CREATE TABLE table_name (col1 INT PRIMARY KEY, col2 VARCHAR(50) NOT NULL); ALTER TABLE ALTER TABLE table_name ADD COLUMN col3 DATE; DROP TABLE DROP TABLE IF EXISTS table_name; Data Manipulation Language (DML) SELECT SELECT col1, col2 FROM table_name WHERE col3 = 'value'; INSERT INSERT INTO table_name (col1, col2) VALUES (1, 'text'); UPDATE UPDATE table_name SET col2 = 'new' WHERE col1 = 1; DELETE DELETE FROM table_name WHERE col1 = 1; Transaction Control BEGIN / START TRANSACTIO...