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?
2 Answers
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.
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?