up vote 3 down vote favorite
share [g+] share [fb]

I have a table that looks like this:

id,  col1,   col2   col3
0    "Goat"  "10"   "0"
1    "Cat"   "11"   "0"
2    "Goat"  "12"   "1"
3    "Mouse" "13"   "0"
4    "Cat"   "14"   "2"

I want be able to return the UNIQUE values in Col1 AND if there are two identical values in col1 then use col3 to decide which value to use i.e. if it has a '0' in col3.

So I should get a table like this:

id,  col1,   col2   col3
0    "Goat"  "10"   "0"
1    "Cat"   "11"   "0"
3    "Mouse" "13"   "0"

Hope this makes sense?

Thank you

link|improve this question

feedback

2 Answers

up vote 3 down vote accepted

Read about ROW_NUMBER() OVER(): http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/ms186734.aspx

You have to select rows, where ROW_NUMBER() OVER(PARTITION BY col1 ORDER BY col3) is 1:

select *
from 
(select
  id, 
  col1, 
  col2, 
  col3,
  ROW_NUMBER() OVER(PARTITION BY col1 ORDER BY col3) nom
from table_name) a
where a.nom = 1
link|improve this answer
Excellent solution. Throw in an Order By id and you have a match to the desired result. May have to make this a sub query if you want to take the 'nom' column out of the result. – Jeff O Nov 4 '09 at 17:50
ROW_NUMBER() is part of the SQL standard and can be used on other sql engines too. It is definitely worth to know. – LukLed Nov 4 '09 at 18:39
INNER JOIN is even more part of the SQL standard, and it works on MySQL! hehe – Andomar Nov 4 '09 at 19:37
feedback

You could use an inner join to filter the rows which have to lowest col3 for their col1:

select t.*
from @t t
inner join (
    select col1, mincol3 = min(col3)
    from @t
    group by col1
) filter
    on t.col1 = filter.col1
    and t.col3 = filter.mincol3

If there are multiple rows with the same (col1,col3) this query will return them all.

Code segment to generate test data:

declare @t table (id int, col1 varchar(max), col2 varchar(max), 
    col3 varchar(max))
insert into @t
select 0,    'Goat', '10',  '0'
union select 1,    'Cat',  '11',  '0'
union select 2,    'Goat', '12',  '1'
union select 3,    'Mouse','13',  '0'
union select 4,    'Cat',  '14',  '2'
link|improve this answer
Thank you for the test data code. And the solution ;) – Jeff O Nov 4 '09 at 17:54
feedback

Your Answer

 
or
required, but never shown

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