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I need to run a select statement that returns all rows where the value of a column is not distinct (e.g. EmailAddress).

For example, if the table looks like below:

CustomerName     EmailAddress
Aaron            [email protected]
Christy          [email protected]
Jason            [email protected]
Eric             [email protected]
John             [email protected]

I need the query to return:

Aaron            [email protected]
Christy          [email protected]
John             [email protected]

I have read many posts and tried different queries to no avail. The query that I believe should work is below. Can someone suggest an alternative or tell me what may be wrong with my query?

select EmailAddress, CustomerName from Customers
group by EmailAddress, CustomerName
having COUNT(distinct(EmailAddress)) > 1
0

7 Answers 7

356

This is significantly faster than the EXISTS way:

SELECT [EmailAddress], [CustomerName] FROM [Customers] WHERE [EmailAddress] IN
  (SELECT [EmailAddress] FROM [Customers] GROUP BY [EmailAddress] HAVING COUNT(*) > 1)
4
  • 2
    Hey, I know this answer is 7 years old, but if you're still around would you mind explaining how it works? Solved my problem as well!
    – Lou
    Dec 6, 2019 at 18:04
  • 7
    Using a HAVING here instead of a second SELECT...WHERE causes this to be a single query, instead of the second option which executes that second SELECT...WHERE call many times. See more here: stackoverflow.com/q/9253244/550975
    – Serj Sagan
    Dec 6, 2019 at 18:38
  • I get the infamous [EmailAddress] must appear in the GROUP BY clause or be used in an aggregate function error. Is the only fix - editing the sql_mode? Jul 16, 2020 at 16:21
  • Well, in the query above, [EmailAddress] IS in the GROUP BY
    – Serj Sagan
    Feb 2 at 21:25
72

The thing that is incorrect with your query is that you are grouping by email and name, that forms a group of each unique set of email and name combined together and hence

aaron and aaron@gmail.com
christy and [email protected]
john and [email protected]

are treated as 3 different groups rather all belonging to 1 single group.

Please use the query as given below :

select emailaddress,customername from customers where emailaddress in
(select emailaddress from customers group by emailaddress having count(*) > 1)
1
  • 29
    I like that you also included an explanation about what is wrong with the original query, unlike the accepted answer.
    – user4469411
    Feb 5, 2016 at 8:20
24
select CustomerName,count(1) from Customers group by CustomerName having count(1) > 1
1
  • minor enhancment to show count as "dups": select CustomerName,count(1) as dups from Customers group by CustomerName having count(1) > 1`
    – DynamicDan
    May 15, 2015 at 11:03
13

How about

SELECT EmailAddress, CustomerName FROM Customers a
WHERE Exists ( SELECT emailAddress FROM customers c WHERE a.customerName != c.customerName AND a.EmailAddress = c.EmailAddress)
0
11

Just for fun, here's another way:

;with counts as (
    select CustomerName, EmailAddress,
      count(*) over (partition by EmailAddress) as num
    from Customers
)
select CustomerName, EmailAddress
from counts
where num > 1
3
  • 2
    +1 for CTE version We shouldn't repeat ourselves in code, why repeat ourselves in SQL if we don't have to anymore.
    – yzorg
    Aug 17, 2016 at 14:25
  • 2
    I use _count for the count column (over num). I consistently use underscore when columns happen to collide with SQL keywords like _default, _type, _sum, etc.
    – yzorg
    Aug 17, 2016 at 14:26
  • Loved it, much cleaner, and also the only one that was working accross multiple versions of MariaDB May 16, 2022 at 15:41
4

Rather than using sub queries in where condition which will increase the query time where records are huge.

I would suggest to use Inner Join as a better option to this problem.

Considering the same table this could give the result

SELECT EmailAddress, CustomerName FROM Customers as a 
Inner Join Customers as b on a.CustomerName <> b.CustomerName and a.EmailAddress = b.EmailAddress

For still better results I would suggest you to use CustomerID or any unique field of your table. Duplication of CustomerName is possible.

0
SELECT        Title, Id
FROM            dbo.TblNews
WHERE        (Title IN
      (SELECT  Title 
FROM dbo.TblNews AS TblNews_1
GROUP BY Title
HAVING (COUNT(*) > 1)))
ORDER BY Title
  • sort in title

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