The immediate cause of your error is that you are referencing BOOK_COST
as a scalar (not within a grouping function), but it is not part of the GROUP BY
expression.
The obvious "solution" would be to add BOOK_COST
to the GROUP BY
list, but I doubt that will give you the answer you want. In fact, I suspect you already have more columns in the GROUP BY
than you really want.
It looks like what you want is to:
- Compute the average cost of books within each subject
- List all books and for each, display the difference between that book's cost and the average within its subject
As shown in Gordon's answer, one way to achieve this is by using the windowing version of AVG()
with an appropriate partition clause. If my guess about your requirements is correct, then what you want is actually:
SELECT BOOK.BOOK_NUM AS "Book Number",
BOOK.BOOK_TITLE AS "Book Title",
BOOK.BOOK_SUBJECT AS "BOOK SUBJECT",
ROUND(AVG(BOOK.BOOK_COST) OVER (PARTITION BY BOOK.BOOK_SUBJECT), 2) as "Subject Avg",
(BOOK_COST - ROUND(AVG(BOOK.BOOK_COST) OVER (PARTITION BY BOOK.BOOK_SUBJECT), 2)) AS "COST DIFFERENCE"
FROM BOOK;
(You could also use a subquery to avoid writing out the window function twice, but that's not really important for this answer.)
Just for illustration (or if you happen to be on an old version of Oracle), here's a way to do it without a window function:
WITH subjects as (
SELECT book.book_subject, round(avg(book.book_cost),2) as avg_cost
FROM book
GROUP BY book.book_subject
)
SELECT
book.book_num,
book.book_title,
book.book_subject,
subjects.avg_cost,
book.book_cost - subjects.avg_cost
FROM
book
JOIN
subjects ON subject.book_subject = book.book_subject
This does one query against the table to find the average cost within each subject, then joins that with the base table so you can calculate the difference for each individual book.