0

I have the following two tables:

TABLE: area
*City_ID   *Number   Name
--------   -------   ----
SUR        1         Fleetwood
SUR        2         Whalley
SUR        3         Guildford
SUR        4         Newton
SUR        5         Cloverdale
SUR        6         South Surrey
ABB        1         Abbotsford East
ABB        2         Abbotsford West
ABB        3         Aberdeen
ABB        4         Bradner
ABB        5         Central Abbotsford
ABB        6         Matsqui
ABB        7         Poplar
ABB        8         Sumas Mountain
ABB        9         Sumas Prairie

TABLE: city
*ID        Name
---        ----
SUR        Surrey
ABB        Abbotsford
LAN        Langley

Using the following statement:

SELECT DISTINCT area.City_ID, city.Name
FROM area
INNER JOIN city
WHERE area.City_ID = city.ID

I get:

SELECT:
City_ID    city.Name
-------    ---------
SUR        Surrey
ABB        Abbotsford

But how do I SELECT the following:

SELECT:
City_ID    city.Name    area_COUNT
-------    ---------    ----------
SUR        Surrey       6
ABB        Abbotsford   9

where area_COUNT is the number of rows in area for each corresponding City_ID?

4 Answers 4

2

Use GROUP BY instead of DISTINCT:

SELECT city.City_ID, city.Name, COUNT(*)
FROM area
INNER JOIN city
WHERE area.City_ID = city.ID
GROUP BY city.ID
1
  • please see comment at answer 11519121 below
    – Ana Ban
    Jul 17, 2012 at 23:41
1

You should also add Name in Group by clause

SELECT area.City_ID, city.Name, count(*) as area_COUNT 
FROM area 
INNER JOIN city 
WHERE area.City_ID = city.ID 
GROUP BY area.City_ID,City.Name
2
  • @AnaBan He's right. The SQL spec requires all non aggregate columns to be listed in the group by.
    – Ariel
    Jul 17, 2012 at 9:13
  • MySQL allows not listing them. If the column doens't have the same value for all grouped rows, then an arbitrary choice will be made.
    – MvG
    Jul 17, 2012 at 9:21
0

add group by at the end

SELECT area.City_ID, city.Name, count(*) as area_COUNT
FROM area
INNER JOIN city
WHERE area.City_ID = city.ID
GROUP BY area.City_ID
1
  • thanks, shankhan, but i saw @MvG 's answer first. thanks again, though. :D
    – Ana Ban
    Jul 17, 2012 at 8:54
0

Use GROUP BY instead of DISTINCT:

SELECT city.City_ID, city.Name, COUNT(*) FROM area INNER JOIN city WHERE area.City_ID = city.ID GROUP BY city.ID

1
  • Still you need to add Name column in the group by clause
    – Madhivanan
    Jul 18, 2012 at 8:13

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.