suppose I have this table

id | cash 
1    200
2    301
3    101
4    700

and I want to return the first row in which the sum of all the previous cash is greater than a certain value:

So for instance, if I want to return the first row in which the sum of all the previous cash is greater than 500, is should return to row 3

How do I do this using mysql statement?

using WHERE SUM(cash) > 500 doesn't work

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You want to select id=3 because 200 + 300 >= 500 or because 501 > 500? – Dolph Jul 19 '10 at 19:42
Are you including an ORDER BY clause? You can't really say get the "next" record because the rows aren't stored in any particular order. – Robot Jul 19 '10 at 19:45
it's because 200+301 >= 500... yea i tried the order by and having clauses as well but in this scenario they would return row 4 because row 4 is >= 500, not row 3 as intended – kamikaze_pilot Jul 19 '10 at 19:49
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4 Answers

up vote 4 down vote accepted

You can only use aggregates for comparison in the HAVING clause:

GROUP BY ...
  HAVING SUM(cash) > 500

The HAVING clause requires you to define a GROUP BY clause.

To get the first row where the sum of all the previous cash is greater than a certain value, use:

SELECT y.id, y.cash
  FROM (SELECT t.id,
               t.cash,
               (SELECT SUM(x.cash)
                  FROM TABLE x
                 WHERE x.id <= t.id) AS running_total
         FROM TABLE t
     ORDER BY t.id) y
 WHERE y.running_total > 500
ORDER BY y.id
   LIMIT 1

Because the aggregate function occurs in a subquery, the column alias for it can be referenced in the WHERE clause.

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I think his edit clarified what he meant and made this no longer true – Michael Mrozek Jul 19 '10 at 19:43
@Michael Mrozek: Thx for the heads up, think I got it. – OMG Ponies Jul 19 '10 at 19:50
hi there, thanks for the help I'm wondering on whether or not this code would perform well on a large table though Any comments on the performance costs of using this approach on a large database? – kamikaze_pilot Jul 19 '10 at 19:59
@user380714: You could add indexes if there was a need, but being a calculated column there's no way to specify an index for the running_total column. And the more the data can be limited - say a particular account - the better. – OMG Ponies Jul 19 '10 at 20:02
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Not tested, but I think this will be close?

SELECT m1.id
FROM mytable m1
INNER JOIN mytable m2 ON m1.id < m2.id
GROUP BY m1.id
HAVING SUM(m1.cash) > 500
ORDER BY m1.id
LIMIT 1,2

The idea is to SUM up all the previous rows, get only the ones where the sum of the previous rows is > 500, then skip one and return the next one.

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When using aggregate functions to filter, you must use a HAVING statement.

SELECT *
FROM tblMoney
HAVING Sum(CASH) > 500
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In general, a condition in the WHERE clause of an SQL query can reference only a single row. The context of a WHERE clause is evaluated before any order has been defined by an ORDER BY clause, and there is no implicit order to an RDBMS table.

You can use a derived table to join each row to the group of rows with a lesser id value, and produce the sum of each sum group. Then test where the sum meets your criterion.

SELECT s.*
FROM (
  SELECT t.id, SUM(cash) AS cash_sum
  FROM MyTable t JOIN MyTable prev ON (t.id >= prev.id)
  GROUP BY t.id) AS s
WHERE s.cash_sum >= 500
ORDER BY s.id
LIMIT 1;
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