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Table A has a number of rows, only some of which have (multiple) children in Table B. I need to count the rows in table A that have children.

At the moment I have

SELECT count(tableA.id) as count
FROM (tableA)
JOIN tableB ON tableB.tableA_id = tableA.id

Unfortunately this also counts multiple children from tableB in the count. Is there any way to prevent this?

3 Answers 3

2

This should work:

SELECT count(tableA.id) as count
FROM (tableA)
where id in (select tableA_id from tableB)

Or, using EXISTS:

SELECT count(tableA.id) as count
FROM (tableA)
where exists (select 1 from tableB where tableB.tableA_id = tableA.id)
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  • I find EXISTS to have better performance more often than DISTINCT. Jan 17, 2012 at 12:57
1

You only need to put the DISTINCT keyword into your COUNT (inner join contains only rows from tableA that have children in tableB)

SELECT COUNT(DISTINCT tableA.id) AS count
FROM (tableA)
JOIN tableB ON tableB.tableA_id = tableA.id
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A couple of alternatives:

SELECT count(distinct tableA.id) as `count`
FROM tableA
JOIN tableB ON tableB.tableA_id = tableA.id

or:

SELECT count(*) as `count`
FROM (tableA)
where exists
(select null from tableB where tableB.tableA_id = tableA.id)

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