1

I've seen a few different versions of this question but having difficulty applying it to what I need...

MS SQL Server 2008 query:

SELECT Receipts.ReceiptID, Receipts.UserID, Receipts.UserCardID, FolderLink.ReceiptFolderLinkID
FROM dbo.tbl_ReceiptFolderLnk AS FolderLink 
    INNER JOIN dbo.tbl_Receipt AS Receipts ON FolderLink.ReceiptID = Receipts.ReceiptID

**

ReceiptID            UserID               UserCardID           ReceiptFolderLinkID
-------------------- -------------------- -------------------- --------------------
1                    1                    3                    2
2                    1                    3                    3
3                    1                    3                    10
4                    1                    4                    11
5                    1                    4                    13
6                    2                    5                    14
3                    1                    3                    15
4                    1                    4                    16

**

Now I would like to get distinct values on ReceiptID. Using distinct will not work as distinct works on the entire row.

Help would be appreciated.

Thanks!

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  • 2
    For each ReceiptID you will hev several values of UserCardID which value of UserCardId do you want as this will tell us how to combine the rows.
    – mmmmmm
    Oct 9, 2009 at 14:58

5 Answers 5

2

If you want all the results columns in your original query and want each ReceiptID to only show up one time, you'll need to use GROUP BY.

Like:

SELECT Receipts.ReceiptID,
    MIN(Receipts.UserID),
    MIN(Receipts.UserCardID),
    MIN(FolderLink.ReceiptFolderLinkID)
FROM dbo.tbl_ReceiptFolderLnk AS FolderLink
INNER JOIN dbo.tbl_Receipt AS Receipts ON FolderLink.ReceiptID = Receipts.ReceiptID
GROUP BY Receipts.ReceiptID
1

Asking for one of many rows with the same receiptID is ambiguous. How do you want to choose that one row from the others?

1

I've done this with the MIN or MAX aggregate functions which seems to work pretty well and is far simpler to write than most other methods I've seen.

So it'd be something like this:

SELECT [ColumnA], MIN(ColumnB) AS ColumnB, MIN(ColumnC) AS ColumnC 
FROM MyTable 
GROUP BY ColumnA

In this case ColumnA would be the distinct column.

1
  • This is what Ben is suggesting, above. Works great! Thanks Guys!
    – ElHaix
    Oct 9, 2009 at 18:49
0

DISTINCT is distinct for the whole row. Try GROUP BY ReceiptID, of course the values for the other columns may not make sense, because it will just pick one row.

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  • 2
    This will fail on all the DBMS I know. All selected columns must be an aggregate function or listed in the group by clause.
    – Ben S
    Oct 9, 2009 at 14:59
  • @Ben S: won't fail in MySQL, it will just pick any random record from the group.
    – Quassnoi
    Oct 9, 2009 at 14:59
  • Is this randomness cryptographically strong? Because if it isn't, I don't see how this behavior could be useful... ;)
    – Lucero
    Oct 9, 2009 at 15:03
  • 1
    @Lucero: if you are grouping by a PRIMARY KEY in a joined table, there is no point in grouping by other columns to return them: they are guaranteed to be the same.
    – Quassnoi
    Oct 9, 2009 at 15:40
0
SELECT  Receipts.ReceiptID, Receipts.UserID, Receipts.UserCardID, ReceiptFolderLinkID
FROM    dbo.tbl_Receipt AS Receipts
CROSS APPLY
        (
        SELECT  TOP 1 FolderLink.ReceiptFolderLinkID
        FROM    dbo.tbl_ReceiptFolderLnk FolderLink
        WHERE   FolderLink.ReceiptID = Receipts.ReceiptID
        ORDER BY
                FolderLink.ReceiptFolderLinkID
        ) fl

This will eliminate the need for GROUP BY or DISTINCT which may be quite inoptimal.

Also by changing the ORDER BY clause you can choose which FolderLink you want to return if there are muptiple.

2
  • This, unfortunately didn't work - Incorrect syntax near the keyword 'CROSS' and 'ORDER'.
    – ElHaix
    Oct 9, 2009 at 18:48
  • @ElHaix: sure, I confused the order of the clauses.
    – Quassnoi
    Oct 9, 2009 at 18:59

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