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I've got some answers to a questionaire stored in a table, and I want to count how many unique responses to a certain campaign are made. Preferably within one (sub)query

These are the relevant tables

cr_campaign

id, name, ..... meta ....

cr_answers

id, campaign_id, response_id, question_id, answer, ts  

Where the response_id is a unique identifier per response, with multiple tupples in the cr_answers table.

eg:

56 | 1 | 'efghays' | 34 | 'Answer' | 2014-04-01 13:59:08
57 | 1 | 'efghays' | 35 | 'Answer to other question' | 2014-04-01 13:59:08
58 | 1 | 'zlxkjgh' | 34 | 'Answer by other person' | 2014-03-30 15:45:35

I tried this query, but the subquery returns more then one row, because it counts the tuples within the group by instead of the total of rows returned.

SELECT *, ( SELECT count(*) 
            FROM cr_answers 
            WHERE campaign_id = cr_campaign.id 
            GROUP BY response_id
          ) as responses
FROM cr_campaign
ORDER BY actief

1 Answer 1

2

For a certain campaign with id _id

select count(distinct response_id) as responses
from
    cr_answers a
    inner join
    cr_campain c on a.campaign_id = c.id
where c.id = _id

For all campaigns

select c.id, count(distinct response_id) as responses
from
    cr_answers a
    inner join
    cr_campain c on a.campaign_id = c.id
group by c.id
order by c.id
8
  • group by is also ordering - no need for the order by
    – blue
    Apr 1, 2014 at 12:13
  • @blue Although it is likely that an ordered set will be returned, specially for small ones, there is no guarantee. Apr 1, 2014 at 12:17
  • Thank you for the response! But it does not take in account the response_id. It returns 3 responses, but it should be two: as there are two persons who answered the campaign. (distinction by the response_id column.
    – stUrb
    Apr 1, 2014 at 12:20
  • 1
    @blue This question is tagged Postgresql not MySQL Apr 1, 2014 at 12:29
  • 1
    @blue: This question is for PostgreSQL, and there's nothing in the PostgreSQL docs saying that GROUP BY implies ORDER BY... So unless it's part of some SQL standard, I don't think your claim generally applies. Apr 1, 2014 at 12:29

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