Howdy - I'm a MySQL Noob. I have a table of various business listings and I am trying to populate a second table called cities that contains unique city names along with a count of how many listings per city. I'm able to do a SELECT statement that gets me this data fine like so:

SELECT city,state,sum(count)
FROM (
SELECT city,state, 1 AS count FROM listings
) results
GROUP BY city
ORDER BY sum(count) DESC,city;

However, now I want to update the table, but I can't seem to get a proper statement to work. This is the latest that I have, but I'm currently getting a "Invalid use of group function" error.

INSERT INTO cities(city,state,size)
SELECT city,state,sum(count)
FROM (
SELECT city,state, 1 AS count FROM listings
) results
ON DUPLICATE KEY UPDATE id=LAST_INSERT_ID(id), size=sum(count);

Any help is appreciated!

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2 Answers

Would something as simple as this work?

insert into cities (city, state, size)
select city, state, count(*) as size from listings
group by city, state

group by should ensure that there are no duplicates so that there is no need for on duplicate key. The sum() + subquery thing you were doing looks like you were just trying to do a count(*).

The specific error you were getting was because of the size=sum(count). In a batch insert the correct way to do this would be size=values(size), see the docs on values().

EDIT:

If it's adding another entry for each city then there isn't a unique index on city and on duplicate key won't do anything anyway.

if you add a unique index on (city, state) then you can add on duplicate key update size=values(size) to the above query and it will update each record in place.

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I think we just posted the same query. – Dereleased Nov 11 '09 at 0:41
Hm, this works but it seems to be adding another entry for each duplicate city versus updating the previous entry. I guess that's what I was getting at by having the "ON DUPLICATE KEY UPDATE" portion of the statement. – systemride Nov 11 '09 at 1:06
you don't need ON DUPLICATE KEY if you TRUNCATE the table first. but if you really want UN DUPLICATE KEY (which isn't really a bad approach) then you need to have a PRIMARY or UNIQUE key on (city, state), which you probably don't have. – longneck Nov 11 '09 at 2:31
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Try this, though I wish I had something to test it on before unleashing it on you.

insert into cities (city, state, size)
select city, state, count(*) AS size
from listings
group by city, state
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