Again - not really hidden features, but really handy:
Feature
Easily grab DDL:
SHOW CREATE TABLE CountryLanguage
output:
CountryLanguage | CREATE TABLE countrylanguage (
CountryCode char(3) NOT NULL DEFAULT '',
Language char(30) NOT NULL DEFAULT '',
IsOfficial enum('T','F') NOT NULL DEFAULT 'F',
Percentage float(4,1) NOT NULL DEFAULT '0.0',
PRIMARY KEY (CountryCode,Language)
CountryCode,Language)
) ENGINE=MyISAM DEFAULT CHARSET=latin1
Feature: GROUP_CONCAT() aggregate function Creates a concatenated string of its arguments per detail, and aggregates by concatenating those per group.
Example 1: simple
SELECT CountryCode
, GROUP_CONCAT(Language) AS List
FROM CountryLanguage
GROUP BY CountryCode
Output:
+-------------+------------------------------------+
| CountryCode | List |
+-------------+------------------------------------+
| ABW | Dutch,English,Papiamento,Spanish |
. ... . ... .
| ZWE | English,Ndebele,Nyanja,Shona |
+-------------+------------------------------------+
Example 2: multiple arguments
SELECT CountryCode
, GROUP_CONCAT(
Language
, IF(IsOfficial='T', ' (Official)', '')
) AS List
FROM CountryLanguage
GROUP BY CountryCode
Output:
+-------------+---------------------------------------------+
| CountryCode | List |
+-------------+---------------------------------------------+
| ABW | Dutch (Official),English,Papiamento,Spanish |
. ... . ... .
| ZWE | English (Official),Ndebele,Nyanja,Shona |
+-------------+---------------------------------------------+
Example 3: Using a custom separator
SELECT CountryCode
, GROUP_CONCAT(Language SEPARATOR ' and ') AS List
FROM CountryLanguage
GROUP BY CountryCode
Output:
+-------------+----------------------------------------------+
| CountryCode | List |
+-------------+----------------------------------------------+
| ABW | Dutch and English and Papiamento and Spanish |
. ... . ... .
| ZWE | English and Ndebele and Nyanja and Shona |
+-------------+----------------------------------------------+
Example 4: Controlling the order of the list elements
SELECT CountryCode
, GROUP_CONCAT(
Language
ORDER BY CASE IsOfficial WHEN 'T' THEN 1 ELSE 2 END DESC
, Language
) AS List
FROM CountryLanguage
GROUP BY CountryCode
Output:
+-------------+------------------------------------+
| CountryCode | List |
+-------------+------------------------------------+
| ABW | English,Papiamento,Spanish,Dutch, |
. ... . ... .
| ZWE | Ndebele,Nyanja,Shona,English |
+-------------+------------------------------------+
Feature: COUNT(DISTINCT ) with multiple expressions
You can use multiple expressions in a COUNT(DISTINCT ...) expression to count the number of combinations.
SELECT COUNT(DISTINCT CountryCode, Language) FROM CountryLanguage
Feature / Gotcha: No need to include non-aggregated expressions in the GROUP BY list
Most RDBMS-es enforce a SQL92 compliant GROUP BY which requires all non-aggregated expressions in the SELECT list to appear in the GROUP BY. In these RDBMS-es, this statement:
SELECT Country.Code, Country.Continent, COUNT(CountryLanguage.Language)
FROM CountryLanguage
INNER JOIN Country
ON CountryLanguage.CountryCode = Country.Code
GROUP BY Country.Code
is not valid, because the SELECT list contains the non-aggregated column Country.Continent which does not appear in the GROUP BY list. In these RDBMS-es, you must either modify the GROUP BY list to read
GROUP BY Country.Code, Country.Continent
or you must add some non-sense aggregate to Country.Continent, for example
SELECT Country.Code, MAX(Country.Continent), COUNT(CountryLanguage.Language)
Now, the thing is, logically there is nothing that demands that Country.Continent should be aggreagated. See, Country.Code is the primary key of the Country table. Country.Continent is also a column from the Country table and is thus by definitions functionally dependent upon the primary key Country.Code. So, there must exist exactly one value in Country.Continent for each distinct Country.Code. If you realize that, than you realize that it does not make sense to aggregate it (there is just one value, right) nor to group by it (as it won't make the result more unique as you're already grouping by on the pk)
Anyway - MySQL lets you include non-aggregated columns in the SELECT list without requiring you to also add them to the GROUP BY clause.
The gotcha with this is that MySQL does not protect you in case you happen to use a non-aggregated column. So, a query like this:
SELECT Country.Code, COUNT(CountryLanguage.Language), CountryLanguage.Percentage
FROM CountryLanguage
INNER JOIN Country
ON CountryLanguage.CountryCode = Country.Code
GROUP BY Country.Code
Will be executed without complaint, but the CountryLanguage.Percentage column will contain non-sense (that is to say, of all languages percentages, one of the available values for the percentage will be picked at random or at least outside your control.
See: [http://rpbouman.blogspot.com/2007/05/debunking-group-by-myths.html%5D%5BDebunking Group By Myths]
