153
myCol
------
 true
 true
 true
 false
 false
 null

In the above table, if I do :

select count(*), count(myCol);

I get 6, 5

I get 5 as it doesn't count the null entry.

How do I also count the number of true values (3 in the example)?

(This is a simplification and I'm actually using a much more complicated expression within the count function)

Edit summary: I also want to include a plain count(*) in the query, so can't use a where clause

7
  • Does 't' stand for True anf 'f' for False? Or are you looking for something like SELECT COUNT(DISTINCT myCol). Mar 22, 2011 at 19:16
  • take a look at my second example, you can throw a WHERE myCol = true in there if you want and if you remove the first *, it'll just return the number.
    – vol7ron
    Mar 22, 2011 at 19:41
  • @Shamit yes t stands for true, and f stands for false, I've updated the question
    – EoghanM
    Mar 22, 2011 at 20:23
  • You might as well not simplify your question/query... your requirements restrict the better performance possibilities and people are responding with inefficient answers, which are getting bumped up for no good reason.
    – vol7ron
    Mar 23, 2011 at 0:18
  • 1
    @vol7ron in my defense there has to be some simplification in order to ask a comprehensible question, but yes, I oversimplified when I originally posted.
    – EoghanM
    Mar 24, 2011 at 17:26

11 Answers 11

201
SELECT COALESCE(sum(CASE WHEN myCol THEN 1 ELSE 0 END),0) FROM <table name>

or, as you found out for yourself:

SELECT count(CASE WHEN myCol THEN 1 END) FROM <table name>
8
  • 2
    also, any reason why you did sum(.. THEN 1 ELSE 0) instead of count(.. THEN true else null) ?
    – EoghanM
    Mar 22, 2011 at 20:32
  • 5
    No... it is just that I wasn't sure which values would count() count... and I knew that sum did the trick. But beware: On second thought I believe that sum() over only null values will return null, so it should be COALESCE(sum(...),0) for you, or, in other words, count() is better,
    – Daniel
    Mar 22, 2011 at 21:38
  • 1
    @EoghanM, see shorter answer involving cast. Jan 3, 2014 at 18:10
  • 2
    You can actually omit ELSE null to get the same result. May 12, 2016 at 18:26
  • 2
    You can also use COUNT() to do more esoteric applications like COUNT(DISTINCT CASE WHEN mycol2 THEN mycol1 END) which counts distinct mycol1 when mycol2 is true
    – raphael
    Apr 11, 2017 at 20:29
159
+200

Since PostgreSQL 9.4 there's the FILTER clause, which allows for a very concise query to count the true values:

select count(*) filter (where myCol)
from tbl;

The above query is a bad example in that a simple WHERE clause would suffice, and is for demonstrating the syntax only. Where the FILTER clause shines is that it is easy to combine with other aggregates:

select count(*), -- all
       count(myCol), -- non null
       count(*) filter (where myCol) -- true
from tbl;

The clause is especially handy for aggregates on a column that uses another column as the predicate, while allowing to fetch differently filtered aggregates in a single query:

select count(*),
       sum(otherCol) filter (where myCol)
from tbl;
0
117

Cast the Boolean to an integer and sum.

SELECT count(*),sum(myCol::int);

You get 6,3.

3
  • 5
    Plus1: Nice hack! This is probably even faster than my solution.
    – Daniel
    Jun 27, 2016 at 11:29
  • 1
    This is the best and shortest solution (and has equivalences in many other programming environments and software). Should be up-voted more
    – user7969724
    Apr 27, 2018 at 16:20
  • 6
    The 'cast to int and count' is clearly the most concise, but that doesn't make it best. I would not endorse this, because while many environments use the 0/1 representation for false/true, many use 0/non-zero, including -1. I agree it's a "hack," and casts are dicey enough when they aren't "hacks." Won't downvote but again, wouldn't endorse. May 26, 2020 at 21:47
48

probably, the best approach is to use nullif function.

in general

select
    count(nullif(myCol = false, true)),  -- count true values
    count(nullif(myCol = true, true)),   -- count false values
    count(myCol);

or in short

select
    count(nullif(myCol, true)),  -- count false values
    count(nullif(myCol, false)), -- count true values
    count(myCol);

http://www.postgresql.org/docs/9.0/static/functions-conditional.html

3
  • 2
    Your "in general" looks wrong: AFAICS, nullif([boolean expression], true) will return false if [boolean expression] is false, and null if it is true, so you will be counting the false values. I think you want nullif([boolean expression], false).
    – rjmunro
    Jul 22, 2015 at 11:21
  • yep, the "general" case should be the other way around. fixed. thanks.
    – wrobell
    Jul 24, 2015 at 14:41
  • 1
    Yuk. That fix is really confusing. AFAICS, it will now count true or null values. I think that rephrasing it so that you always have nullif([boolean expression], false) makes it much easier to read. You can then vary the boolean expression part to be whatever you like, in this case myCol = true to count true values, or myCol = false to count false values, or name='john' to count people called john etc.
    – rjmunro
    Jul 24, 2015 at 15:09
29

The shortest and laziest (without casting) solution would be to use the formula:

SELECT COUNT(myCol OR NULL) FROM myTable;

Try it yourself:

SELECT COUNT(x < 7 OR NULL)
   FROM GENERATE_SERIES(0,10) t(x);

gives the same result than

SELECT SUM(CASE WHEN x < 7 THEN 1 ELSE 0 END)
   FROM GENERATE_SERIES(0,10) t(x);
2
  • This is definitely a nicer solution than mine :)
    – Daniel
    Nov 30, 2015 at 23:21
  • Very insightful answer. Mar 15, 2019 at 19:34
10

Simply convert boolean field to integer and do a sum. This will work on postgresql :

select sum(myCol::int) from <table name>

Hope that helps!

2
  • It is neither faster nor more precise than the other solutions. I believe you come from Oracle when using ints as boolean is more intuitive for you.
    – Daniel
    Jan 20, 2020 at 21:51
  • While it won't work for NULL, its perfect if it is boolean and NOT NULL - was very useful for my case, thanks!
    – Eugene
    Mar 21, 2023 at 15:30
9
select f1,
       CASE WHEN f1 = 't' THEN COUNT(*) 
            WHEN f1 = 'f' THEN COUNT(*) 
            END AS counts,
       (SELECT COUNT(*) FROM mytable) AS total_counts
from mytable
group by f1

Or Maybe this

SELECT SUM(CASE WHEN f1 = 't' THEN 1 END) AS t,
       SUM(CASE WHEN f1 = 'f' THEN 1 END) AS f,
       SUM(CASE WHEN f1 NOT IN ('t','f') OR f1 IS NULL THEN 1 END) AS others,
       SUM(CASE WHEN f1 IS NOT NULL OR f1 IS NULL THEN 1 ELSE 0 END) AS total_count
FROM mytable;
2
  • +1 If myCol expression is a boolean, you can replace the check with where (myCol) Mar 22, 2011 at 19:14
  • sorry I oversimplified my example: I can't use a where clause as I also want to return a total count representing the total number of rows, as well as a count of the true values.
    – EoghanM
    Mar 22, 2011 at 20:20
8

In MySQL, you can do this as well:

SELECT count(*) AS total
     , sum(myCol) AS countTrue --yes, you can add TRUEs as TRUE=1 and FALSE=0 !!
FROM yourTable
;

I think that in Postgres, this works:

SELECT count(*) AS total
     , sum(myCol::int) AS countTrue --convert Boolean to Integer
FROM yourTable
;

or better (to avoid :: and use standard SQL syntax):

SELECT count(*) AS total
     , sum(CAST(myCol AS int)) AS countTrue --convert Boolean to Integer
FROM yourTable
;
1
  • This is the most simple solution I have ever seen ^_^
    – JiaHao Xu
    Mar 28, 2020 at 0:33
5

Benchmark

TL;DR: take the solution you like. There's no significant difference.

Utility scripts

before(){
    psql <<-SQL
        create table bench (
                id         serial
            , thebool    boolean
        );

        insert into bench (thebool)
        select (random() > 0.5)
        from generate_series(1, 1e6) g;


        analyze bench;
    SQL
}
after(){
    psql -c 'drop table bench'
}
test(){
    echo $(tput bold)$1$(tput sgr0)
    psql -c "explain analyze select $1 from bench" | tail -4 | head -2
}

Actual benchmark

Made on a 1.4GHz i5 MacBookPro, psql and pg 12.4 (pg in a linux docker container):

before  
test 'count(*) filter (where thebool)'
# Planning Time: 0.138 ms
# Execution Time: 4424.042 ms
test 'count(case when thebool then 1 end)'
# Planning Time: 0.156 ms
# Execution Time: 4638.861 ms
test 'count(nullif(thebool, false))'
# Planning Time: 0.201 ms
# Execution Time: 5267.631 ms
test 'count(thebool or null)'
# Planning Time: 0.202 ms
# Execution Time: 4672.700 ms
test 'sum(thebool::integer)'
# Planning Time: 0.155 ms
# Execution Time: 4602.406 ms
test 'coalesce(sum(case when thebool THEN 1 ELSE 0 END), 0)'
# Planning Time: 0.167 ms
# Execution Time: 4416.503 ms
after
4
SELECT count(*)         -- or count(myCol)
FROM   <table name>     -- replace <table name> with your table
WHERE  myCol = true;

Here's a way with Windowing Function:

SELECT DISTINCT *, count(*) over(partition by myCol)
FROM   <table name>;

-- Outputs:
-- --------------
-- myCol | count
-- ------+-------
--  f    |  2
--  t    |  3
--       |  1
2
  • sorry I can't return multiple rows for the more complicated example I'm applying this solution to.
    – EoghanM
    Mar 22, 2011 at 20:33
  • Yes, but you can restrict it further by just adding WHERE myCol = true. I provided the second example not because it's any faster, but more as an educational piece to Postgres's windowing functions, which many users aren't comfortable with, or don't know about.
    – vol7ron
    Mar 23, 2011 at 0:00
0
select count(myCol)
from mytable
group by myCol
;

will group the 3 possible states of bool (false, true, 0) in three rows especially handy when grouping together with another column like day

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