I have a table that has a lot of duplicates in the Name column. I'd like to only keep one row for each.

The following lists the duplicates, but I don't know how to delete the duplicates and just keep one:

SELECT name FROM members GROUP BY name HAVING COUNT(*) > 1;

Thank you.

link|improve this question

56% accept rate
feedback

3 Answers

up vote 7 down vote accepted

See the following question: Deleting duplicate rows from a table.

The adapted accepted answer from there (which is my answer, so no "theft" here...):

You can do it in a simple way assuming you have a unique ID field: you can delete all records that are the same except for the ID, but don't have "the minimum ID" for their name.

Example query:

DELETE FROM members
WHERE ID NOT IN
(
    SELECT MIN(ID)
    FROM members
    GROUP BY name
)

In case you don't have a unique index, my recommendation is to simply add an auto-incremental unique index. Mainly because it's good design, but also because it will allow you to run the query above.

link|improve this answer
Here's how I understand the above: For each name, it groups them (only one if unique; several into one if duplicates), selects the smallest ID from the set, and then deletes any row whose ID doesn't exist in the table. Brilliant :) Thanks much Rax. – Gulbahar Aug 17 '09 at 9:16
You got it exactly :) – Roee Adler Aug 17 '09 at 9:19
in mysql I get the following error when sending this query: "error 1093 (HY000) but it gives an error 'You cant specify target table 'members' for update in FROM clause" any ideas? – David Feb 21 '11 at 18:07
the problem was that 'members' was both the field and table name. this is what worked: delete from members where id not in (select min(id) from (select * from members) as x group by name) – David Feb 21 '11 at 20:30
feedback

It would probably be easier to select the unique ones into a new table, drop the old table, then rename the temp table to replace it.

#create a table with same schema as members
CREATE TABLE tmp (...);

#insert the unique records
INSERT INTO tmp SELECT * FROM members GROUP BY name;

#swap it in
RENAME TABLE members TO members_old, tmp TO members;

#drop the old one
DROP TABLE members_old;
link|improve this answer
Thanks Paul. For those interested... CREATE TEMP TABLE tmp_members (name VARCHAR); INSERT INTO tmp_members SELECT name FROM members GROUP BY name; SELECT COUNT(name) FROM tmp_members; DELETE FROM members; VACUUM members; SELECT COUNT(name) FROM members; INSERT INTO members (name) SELECT * FROM tmp_members; SELECT COUNT(name) FROM members; SELECT DISTINCT COUNT(name) FROM members; SELECT name FROM members LIMIT 10; DROP TABLE tmp_members; – Gulbahar Aug 17 '09 at 9:11
Sorry, I missed that you were using SQLite! – Paul Dixon Aug 17 '09 at 9:14
feedback

We have a huge database where deleting duplicates is part of the regular maintenance process. We use DISTINCT to select the unique records then write them into a TEMPORARY TABLE. After TRUNCATE we write back the TEMPORARY data into the TABLE.

That is one way of doing it and works as a STORED PROCEDURE.

link|improve this answer
1  
I have to admit Rax Olgud's answer is much-much more sophisticated and probably runs 100 times quicker! :) - I'm thinking about adopting the solution... Deserves +1! – G Berdal Aug 17 '09 at 13:00
feedback

Your Answer

 
or
required, but never shown

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