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In Oracle, stats_mode function selects the mode of a set of data. Unfortunately, it is non-deterministic in picking it's result in the presence of ties (e.g. stats_mode(1,2,1,2) could return 1 or 2 depending on the ordering of rows inside Oracle. In many situations this is not acceptable. Is there a function or nice technique for being able to supply your own deterministic ordering for stats_mode function?

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Oracle's web-page on STATS_MODE explains that If more than one mode exists, Oracle Database chooses one and returns only that one value.

As there are no additional parameters, etc, you can not change it's behaviour.


The same page, however, does also show that the following sample query can generate multiple mode values...

SELECT x FROM (SELECT x, COUNT(x) AS cnt1 FROM t GROUP BY x)
 WHERE cnt1 = (SELECT MAX(cnt2) FROM (SELECT COUNT(x) AS cnt2 FROM t GROUP BY x));

By modifying such code you could once again just choose a single value, as determined by a specified ORDER...

SELECT x FROM (SELECT x, MAX(y) AS y, COUNT(x) AS cnt1 FROM t GROUP BY x)
 WHERE cnt1 = (SELECT MAX(cnt2) FROM (SELECT COUNT(x) AS cnt2 FROM t GROUP BY x))
 AND rownum = 1
 ORDER BY y DESC;

A bit messy, unfortunately, though you may be able to tidy it slightly for your particular case. But I'm not aware of alternative fundamentally different approaches.

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Selecting the value among a set of values with the highest occurring frequency could also be done by counting and ordering.

select x from t group by x order by count(*) desc limit 1;

You can also make it deterministic by ordering on the value itself.

select x from t group by x order by count(*) desc, x desc limit 1;

I don't quite understand the complexity of Oracles query examples, the performance is really bad. Can anyone shine some light on the difference?

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  • for oracle you need to use where rownum = 1 instead of limit 1
    – Martin
    Dec 4, 2017 at 7:06

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