1

i have the following table and I'm hoping to extract all the unique pairs for ex:

+------+------+
| a    | b    |
+------+------+
|    1 |    2 |
|    1 |    3 |
|    1 |    6 |
|    1 |    9 |
|    2 |    1 |
|    2 |    3 |
|    3 |    1 |
|    3 |    2 |
|    4 |    1 |
|    6 |    5 |
+------+------+

the out put should be

+------+------+
| a    | b    |
+------+------+
|    1 |    2 |
|    1 |    3 |
|    1 |    6 |
|    1 |    9 |
|    2 |    3 |
|    6 |    5 |
+------+------+
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  • if the columns and the order doesn't matter select distinct least(a,b), greatest(a,b) from test
    – devanand
    Feb 15, 2014 at 18:53

3 Answers 3

1

Try this:

select least(a, b) as a, greatest(a, b) as b
from table t
group by least(a, b), greatest(a, b);

This could produce output that is not in the original table (such as 5/6 instead of 6/5). If you want to preserve the original order:

select distinct a, b
from table t
where a <= b or
      not exists (select 1 from table t2 where t2.b = t.a and t2.a = t.b);

That is, select all pairs where a is less than or equal to b or a is greater than b and no row exists with the values in the other order.

0
0
SELECT   a,b
FROM     tbl //your tableName
GROUP BY a,b
HAVING   COUNT(*) > 1

try this my friend

1
  • @Gordon it does happen to be a low-value code-only solution dump though. Maybe that was why it was downvoted -- we won't know. Mar 10, 2020 at 10:23
-1
SELECT   *
FROM     NAMES2
GROUP BY Id,id2
HAVING   COUNT(*) > 1;

How about this ?

1
  • Code-only answers are low value on Stackoverflow because they do very little to educate/empower thousands of future researchers. Mar 10, 2020 at 10:23

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