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I have a question about sql queries in access (i just started like 3 days ago)

so there are 2 tables: employes and departments, what i want is to create a query which will show the name and id of each employe and how many departments he manages.

Employee( ID, NAME, social_security_of_employe)

Department(department_id, social_security_of_employee)

(social security is my primary key) my try was:

SELECT E.ID, E.NAME, COUNT(D.SOCIAL_SECURITY) AS NUMBER_OF_DEPARTMENTS

FROM EMPLOYEE E

INNER JOIN DEPARTMENT D

WHERE D.SOCIAL_SECURITY=E.SOCIAL_SECURITY

GROUP BY SOCIAL_SECURITY

thanks in advance

2 Answers 2

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The correct syntax for MS Access is:

SELECT E.ID, E.NAME, COUNT(D.SOCIAL_SECURITY) AS NUMBER_OF_DEPARTMENTS
FROM EMPLOYEE as E INNER JOIN
     DEPARTMENT as D
     ON D.SOCIAL_SECURITY = E.SOCIAL_SECURITY
GROUP BY E.ID, E.NAME;

Changes:

  • MS Access requires as for table aliases.
  • The WHERE clause should be an ON clause.
  • The columns in the GROUP BY need to match the unaggregated columns in the SELECT.
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  • That worked thanks you very much, buy may i ask a question please why instead of WHERE you used ON? what is that command ? havent seen it to be honest, everything i did was with where
    – CHRYSA
    May 31, 2015 at 15:49
  • The explicit join syntax uses ON and it has since the 1990's when it was put into the ANSI standard. I wasn't aware the MS Access had an optional on clause. The only other database that allows this is MySQL. May 31, 2015 at 23:41
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You need to group by all non-aggregated columns listed in the select list, i.e.:

SELECT E.ID, E.NAME, COUNT(D.SOCIAL_SECURITY) AS NUMBER_OF_DEPARTMENTS
FROM EMPLOYEE E
INNER JOIN DEPARTMENT D
ON D.SOCIAL_SECURITY=E.SOCIAL_SECURITY
GROUP BY E.ID, E.NAME;

and not on SOCIAL_SECURITY (you are using the COUNT aggregate on it)

Because E.ID and E.NAME are directly correlated, there will only be a single level of grouping.

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  • Thank you, but i now get an error in FROM clause :(
    – CHRYSA
    May 31, 2015 at 15:45
  • It might have been @Gordon's point that you are using WHERE to JOIN - it should be ON.
    – StuartLC
    May 31, 2015 at 15:50

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