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I have a table called Person that contain a field called PersonAge. I need to group the ages by age bands ie '12 and under', '13-17', '18-25', '25 and over' and return this resultset using a stored procedure.

Ideally I need to get returned 2 fields , 'Age Band', 'Total' like so

Age band         Total 
12 and under     5
13 - 17          8
18 - 25          7
25 and over      10
flag

@Mich, your "18-25" and "25 and over" ageband overlap. – Lieven May 12 at 10:24
@ Lieven Well spotted Lieven, it was a typo in the question as it was late at night (that's my excuse!), I can assure you it's not in the production code... – Mitch Jun 20 at 22:48

5 Answers

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Create a table containing your bands:

CREATE TABLE agebands
(
    id INT NOT NULL PRIMARY KEY,
    lower_bound INT NOT NULL,
    upper_bound INT NOT NULL
)
CREATE INDEX IDX_agebands_bounds ON (lower_bound, upper_bound)

Then populate it with your data:

INSERT INTO agebands VALUES (1, 0, 12)
INSERT INTO agebands VALUES (2, 13, 17)
INSERT INTO agebands VALUES (3, 18, 24)
INSERT INTO agebands VALUES (4, 25, 199)

Then join with it:

SELECT
    lower_bound, upper_bound,
    COUNT(*) AS number_of_people
FROM
    persons
    INNER JOIN agebands
        ON person_age BETWEEN lower_bound AND upper_bound
GROUP BY
    lower_bound, upper_bound
ORDER BY
    lower_bound

This allows for flexibility in adjusting the bands. Of course, the other answer here using UNION is usable too, which is more appropriate if you can/won't add another table to your database.

link|flag
+1 for flexibility – Scoregraphic May 12 at 10:28
+1 Neat, although for this trivial example I'd argue that the union is easier to maintain then the extra table. After one year, no one remembers that all they have to do is add, delete or change a record in a table without reading the source procedure anyway. – Lieven May 12 at 10:30
+1 this is more efficient and maintainable than the union based answer – Sam Saffron May 12 at 10:31
That depends entirely on usage. If hit is an oft-used feature for grouping, to group by age bands, and those age-bands are the same, I'd say that adding a form to manipulate such a table is the user-friendly way, instead of having to make sure the code that executes the SQL builds the correct SQL every time. But yes, if this is a one-off or in-one-place type of feature, I'd go with the union as well. – Lasse V. Karlsen May 12 at 10:32
Very close call between Lievens UNION answer and lassevks extra table approach. I ended up with lassevks extra table approach as it has the added flexibility of allowing the client to alter their own age bands. Many thanks for all your excellent input... – Mitch May 12 at 23:23
vote up 4 vote down

A simple UNION should suffice.

SELECT [Ageband] = '12 and under', COUNT(*)
FROM dbo.Person
WHERE PersonAge <= 12
UNION ALL SELECT '13-17', COUNT(*)
FROM dbo.Person
WHERE PersonAge BETWEEN 13 AND 17
UNION ALL SELECT '18-25', COUNT(*)
FROM dbo.Person
WHERE PersonAge BETWEEN 18 AND 25
UNION ALL SELECT '26 and over', COUNT(*)
FROM dbo.Person
WHERE PersonAge >= 26
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vote up 1 vote down

The following should give:

select count(*), person_age
(select (case age when between 0 and 12 then '12 and under'
               when between 13 and 17 then '13-17'
               when 18 and 25 then '18-15'
               else 'Above 25'
      end) person_age
from person)
group by person_age
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at its current state this does not compile, but it could be made to work ... – Sam Saffron May 12 at 10:33
vote up 0 vote down
declare @tempT table(age int)

declare @temp2 table(age2 varchar(15))

insert into @tempT(age) values(1) insert into @tempT(age) values(2) insert into @tempT(age) values(3) insert into @tempT(age) values(4) insert into @tempT(age) values(5) insert into @tempT(age) values(6) insert into @tempT(age) values(7) insert into @tempT(age) values(8) insert into @tempT(age) values(9) insert into @tempT(age) values(10) insert into @tempT(age) values(11)

insert into @Temp2 select case
when age < 3 then '<3' when age >= 3 and age < 5 then '>= 3 and < 5' when age >= 5 then '>=5' end from @tempT

select count(*), age2 from @Temp2 GROUP BY age2

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vote up 0 vote down

In SQL you cannot group by a column alias. You'd need to repeat the case statement like this.

select count(*), 
case  
    when aged between 0 and 12 then '12 and under'
    when aged between 13 and 17 then '13-17'
    when aged between 18 and 25 then '18-15'
    else 'Above 25' end
from person
group by 
case  
    when aged between 0 and 12 then '12 and under'
    when aged between 13 and 17 then '13-17'
    when aged between 18 and 25 then '18-15'
    else 'Above 25'
end
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