Lets say I have two tables, Members and Orders with a 1:N relation:
Members | Orders
UserID Name | OrderID UserID Name
111 Peter | 777 111 Peter
222 Bart | 888 333 Joe
333 Joe | 999 111 Peter
444 Andrew | 101 444 Andrew
| 102 111 Peter
| 103 333 Joe
I am trying to get the Members ID from the Members table, in case that Member has more than 1 order in the Orders table.
So the result should be...
Members
UserID Name
111 Peter
333 Joe
...because Peter and Joe both have at least 2 orders in the Orders table.
I have tried to get a result with:
SELECT
s.UserID,
FROM Members s
INNER JOIN Orders o
ON s.UserID = o.UserID
WHERE
s.UserID IN
(
SELECT UserID
FROM Orders
GROUP BY UserID
HAVING COUNT(*) > 5
)
But that gives me Peter back 3 times, and Joe 2 times; so I get duplicates instead of each UserID once. How can I get the result without duplicates?
SELECT DISTINCT s.UserID
?HAVING COUNT(*) > 5
then? And you don't even have to JOIN you also can get your answer out off the Orders.UserID column