Why can't we use count(distinct *)
in SQL? As in to count all distinct rows?
-
What do you mean by 'distinct rows'?– True SoftDec 1, 2009 at 13:16
-
Do you have rows that are duplicated in the entire row, is that what you are trying to find?– Adriaan StanderDec 1, 2009 at 13:17
-
Now when I think of it,because our tables are normalized we wont have exact same rows so its useless right?? Is this the reason??– Nitish UpretiDec 1, 2009 at 13:20
-
@Myth17 If you have normalization at a level where primary keys, exist you are correct, all rows will be distinct in that case.– Mark SchultheissDec 1, 2009 at 13:31
9 Answers
select count(*) from (select distinct * from MyTable) as T
Although I strongly suggest that you re-think any queries that use DISTINCT
. In a large percentage of cases, GROUP BY
is more appropriate (and faster).
EDIT: Having read the question comments, I should point out that you should never ask the DBMS to do more work than actually needs doing to get a result. If you know in advance that there will not be any duplicated rows in a table, then don't use DISTINCT
.
-
@CHristian - hi, never seen it done that way before. out of curiosity ran it with an existing table on my end and i'm getting 'Incorrect syntax near ')' '. work in ms sql server? note - my select within the brackets runs perfectly– KamalDec 1, 2009 at 13:26
-
2On Oracle DISTINCT and GROUP BY have the same execution plan because DISTINCT in implemented using GROUP BY. So there should be no difference. Dec 1, 2009 at 13:27
-
@Kamal: Sorry, forgot that SQL Server is a bit iffy with nested queries. Adding an alias name onto the end (
as T
) solved the problem. Dec 1, 2009 at 13:29 -
@MrShiny: It's all about requesting the least amount of work to be done. Conceptually speaking,
GROUP BY
is asking for less work thanDISTINCT
, and will therefore sometimes, not always, result in a more efficient plan. See also the difference betweenJOIN
andEXISTS
. Dec 1, 2009 at 13:31 -
I just used select Count(distinct COLUMN) from MyTable as T and work fine. May 20, 2020 at 19:24
You can select all the columns in your table and group by...
SELECT column1, column2, column3, count(*)
FROM someTable
GROUP BY column1, column2, column3
-
2
why not?
select
count(distinct name)
from
people
-
1Because two poeple could have the same name. The OP asked about COUNT(DISTINCT *). Dec 1, 2009 at 13:18
-
You can indeed.
If you've got an identifier, though, you won't have any entirely distinct rows. But you could do for instance:
SELECT COUNT(DISTINCT SenderID) FROM Messages
You can try a CTE in Sql Server 2005
;WITH cte AS (
SELECT DISTINCT Val1,Val2, Val3
FROM @Table
)
SELECT COUNT(1)
FROM cte
To answer the question, From the documentation
Specifies that all rows should be counted to return the total number of rows in a table. COUNT() takes no parameters and cannot be used with DISTINCT. COUNT() does not require an expression parameter because, by definition, it does not use information about any particular column. COUNT(*) returns the number of rows in a specified table without getting rid of duplicates. It counts each row separately. This includes rows that contain null values.
-
When you say, "From the documentation" which documentation would that be?– Tom HDec 1, 2009 at 14:29
-
Sql Server Help Documentation. msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/ms175997.aspx Dec 1, 2009 at 14:44
some languajes may not be able to handle 'distinct *' so, if you want the distinction made through many columns you might want to use 'distinct ColumnA || ColumnB' , combining the values before judging if they are different. Be mindful whether your variables are numeric and your database handler can make automatic typecast to character strings.
-
1This also isn't a full proof method as-is. For example, ('test', 'string') and ('tes', 't string') would look the same. You could do something with padding the strings, but it gets messy. Better IMO to just use a subquery with DISTINCT and then get a COUNT from that.– Tom HDec 1, 2009 at 14:27
COUNT(*) is the number of rows matching a query.
A row contains unique information such as rowid. All rows are by definition distinct.
You must count the distinct instances of values in some field instead.
-
5Why does a row contain unique information? It doesn't have to... it probably should but its not required.– MurphDec 1, 2009 at 13:23
UberKludge, and may be postgre specific, but
select count( distinct table::text ) from table
select count (Tag_no) from tab_raw_tag_value where tag_no in (select distinct tag_no from tab_raw_tag_value)