12

I am trying to update some fields based on their occurence. If they only occur one time, I am updating some status field.

My current code is as follows:

UPDATE table1
SET statusField = 1
WHERE someID = (
               SELECT someID
               FROM table1
               GROUP BY someID HAVING COUNT(*) = 1
               )

This returns an error like the one in the title: Subquery returned more than 1 value. This is not permitted when the subquery follows =, !=, <, <= , >, >= or when the subquery is used as an expression.

Is there any other, as easily readable/simple, solution to this?

0

3 Answers 3

20

Use IN keyword instead of equals operator like so:

UPDATE table1
SET statusField = 1
WHERE someID IN (
           SELECT someID
           FROM table1
           GROUP BY someID HAVING COUNT(*) = 1
           )

Using = requires that exactly 1 result is returned by the subquery. IN keyword works on a list.

3
  • 1
    Thank you so much for pointing that out! Ran perfectly this time.
    – Nict
    Apr 7, 2014 at 10:30
  • 1
    GROUP BY someID HAVING COUNT(*) = 1 is not required here. Jun 6, 2016 at 2:30
  • Awesome. Thank you!
    – Rob
    Jul 19, 2016 at 13:43
3

You should join your tables in the subselect. It is possible to use 'in', but in your case I would use exists:

UPDATE table1 x
SET statusField = 1
WHERE exists (
               SELECT null
               FROM table1
               WHERE x.someID = someID
               GROUP BY someID 
               HAVING COUNT(*) = 1
               )

For better performance I would use this script instead (sqlserver-2008+):

;WITH x as
(
SELECT rc = count() over (partition by someID), statusField
FROM table1
)
UPDATE x
SET statusField = 1
WHERE rc = 1
1
  • 1
    Thanks! I ended up with using the IN operator as the query only had to run through just under 50 rows, so not too large of a query. However, I will add this to my reportoire! Thank you, again! :)
    – Nict
    Apr 7, 2014 at 17:01
1

Try this

Use Top

UPDATE table1
SET statusField = 1
WHERE someID = (
               SELECT TOP 1 someID
               FROM table1
               GROUP BY someID HAVING COUNT(*) = 1
               )

Or you can use IN clause

UPDATE table1
SET statusField = 1
WHERE someID IN (
               SELECT someID
               FROM table1
               GROUP BY someID HAVING COUNT(*) = 1
               )
1
  • 1
    your first suggestion will not return a useful answer Apr 7, 2014 at 10:57

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