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The query i wrote is:

SELECT ST,COUNT(PHONE) FROM Consumer.Axciom092013 
WHERE MR_AMT >= (HOME_MKT_VALUE_(.45)) 
and ST = 'TX' or ST = 'CA' or ST = 'AZ' or ST = 'CO' or ST = 'FL';

Simply i am trying to find the LTV (Loan-To-Value) ratio of those states, but right now I only need the count of how many records of distinct phone numbers are in each of those states.

I keep getting error about incorrect syntax in line 1.
I thought i did a step by step for it, but cannot seem to get to work!

I have switched the query around and tried just running SELECT ST,COUNT(*) but then i get an error saying the function HOME_MKT_VALUE does not exist

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  • About that second error, are you sure that function exists (and you spelled it correctly)?
    – PinnyM
    Feb 2, 2014 at 17:22

2 Answers 2

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I suspect that you want this:

SELECT ST, COUNT(distinct PHONE)
FROM Consumer.Axciom092013 
WHERE MR_AMT >= HOME_MKT_VALUE_ * 0.45 and
      ST IN ('TX', 'CA', 'AZ', 'CO', 'FL');

SQL only does multiplication with an explicit *. Your expression HOME_MKT_VALUE_(.45) is the syntax for a function call, not multiplication.

I added the distinct for phone because you say you want "distinct phone numbers", implying that there could be duplicates on different rows.

EDIT:

By the way, your original query actually has this logic in the where clause:

WHERE (MR_AMT >= HOME_MKT_VALUE_ * 0.45 and ST = 'TX')
      or ST IN ('CA', 'AZ', 'CO', 'FL');

If that is the logic you really do want, then use it instead.

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  • And you also replaced the ORs with an IN predicate.
    – Andriy M
    Feb 2, 2014 at 19:42
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try this

SELECT     ST, COUNT(DISTINCT PHONE) 
FROM       Consumer.Axciom092013 
WHERE      MR_AMT >= (HOME_MKT_VALUE_(.45)) 
           and ST IN ('TX', 'CA', 'AZ', 'CO', 'FL')
GROUP BY   ST;                                    //mistaken , PHONE

EDIT: I did mistake should not be grouped by PHONE.

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  • If you are getting the COUNT for phone records, why would you group on PHONE?
    – PinnyM
    Feb 2, 2014 at 17:20
  • @PinnyM See your first answer, you were missing what he wanted. He wanted count of distinct phone numbers. I just wanted to group on phone as well so he can get what he wanted.
    – Iqbal
    Feb 2, 2014 at 17:24
  • Are you sure this does what you think it does? Your query would seem to return a single row for each unique ST and PHONE (with a count of how many times that PHONE is duplicated). It appears that the OP wants a count of DISTINCT phone numbers (count of phone numbers with duplicates removed).
    – PinnyM
    Feb 2, 2014 at 17:26
  • @PinnyM I am sure, it will group on ST under ST it will group on PHONE.
    – Iqbal
    Feb 2, 2014 at 17:30
  • @PinnyM I already explained. Can you tell me, what a group on do?
    – Iqbal
    Feb 2, 2014 at 17:36

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