# Select Rows After An Offset When doing pagination and other queries for special-case scenarios, we may need to grab rows after a certain offset. There are two variations of the MySQL syntax for selecting rows after a certain offset. ```sql select * from events limit 100, 10; ``` This first query will grab up to 10 rows after applying an offset of 100. Typically we'll see a `limit` clause with just one value which represents how many rows to limit the result set to. However, if we optionally include `N, ` in the middle of that clause. Whatever number `N` is will be the offset. Another way to write this is: ```sql select * from events limit 10 offset 100; ``` This gets the same result: 10 rows after an offset of 100. This is perhaps a bit more straightforward and reduces the chance that we forget which value is which like we might in the first syntax variation. Note: row ordering is only deterministic if you specify an order. To get consistent results with `offset`, you'll most likely want to be specifying an `order by` clause as well. [source](https://dev.mysql.com/doc/refman/8.0/en/select.html)