587

Is it possible to specify a condition in Count()? I would like to count only the rows that have, for example, "Manager" in the Position column.

I want to do it in the count statement, not using WHERE; I'm asking about it because I need to count both Managers and Other in the same SELECT (something like Count(Position = Manager), Count(Position = Other)) so WHERE is no use for me in this example.

9
  • 6
    Boo to all the * users, use Count(SomeColumnInYourTable) where Position = 'Manager' Sep 9, 2009 at 14:31
  • 8
    @Mark: On all modern databases, this doesn't make any difference. Sep 9, 2009 at 14:34
  • 6
    @Mark & Philippe: Actually it can make a greate difference. If the field is nullable and not indexed, the query need to touch every record in the table, so using count(*) and count(field) can give differnet results and different performance.
    – Guffa
    Sep 9, 2009 at 14:37
  • 4
    I've analyzed execution plans for count(*) vs count(x) for years, and so far I haven't found a single one that showed a difference in performance. That's why I would really like to see an example of a query where there is a difference. Sep 9, 2009 at 14:57
  • 3
    @Matthew: we're not talking about SELECT *, but SELECT COUNT(*), which is a totally different beast. Sep 9, 2009 at 14:58

13 Answers 13

920

If you can't just limit the query itself with a where clause, you can use the fact that the count aggregate only counts the non-null values:

select count(case Position when 'Manager' then 1 else null end)
from ...

You can also use the sum aggregate in a similar way:

select sum(case Position when 'Manager' then 1 else 0 end)
from ...
6
  • what if my field is integer and I want to match null. it doesn't work this way select count(case IntegerField when 'NULL' then 1 else null end) from
    – Faizan
    Aug 31, 2016 at 10:16
  • 2
    @Faizan null is special. Use case when IntegerField is null then ...
    – Peet Brits
    Dec 9, 2016 at 10:08
  • When working with boolean fields you can use this : SUM(CONVERT(int, IsManager)) Apr 4, 2017 at 23:09
  • 3
    SQL Server implies an else null for case statements, so the count() example can be 10 characters shorter (if you count the space). Feb 16, 2018 at 22:05
  • For some curious reason the sum aggregate is somewhat slower than case in MSSQL. I did not observe any difference in PostgreSQL.
    – Marcel
    Nov 28, 2022 at 12:04
259

Assuming you do not want to restrict the rows that are returned because you are aggregating other values as well, you can do it like this:

select count(case when Position = 'Manager' then 1 else null end) as ManagerCount
from ...

Let's say within the same column you had values of Manager, Supervisor, and Team Lead, you could get the counts of each like this:

select count(case when Position = 'Manager' then 1 else null end) as ManagerCount,
    count(case when Position = 'Supervisor' then 1 else null end) as SupervisorCount,
    count(case when Position = 'Team Lead' then 1 else null end) as TeamLeadCount,
from ...
3
  • 7
    @RedFilter It's not even necessary to specify the else part, just end it right after the 1. Sep 22, 2010 at 14:05
  • 9
    @Denis: correct - I often leave the else in as it better documents the results of the case statement, especially for novie SQL developers. For brevity, it can be removed in this case. Sep 22, 2010 at 14:35
  • You can also chain conditions, i.e. case when Position = 'Manager' OR Position = 'Team Lead' then 1 end, nice! Mar 14, 2023 at 23:52
59

@Guffa 's answer is excellent, just point out that maybe is cleaner with an IF statement

select count(IIF(Position = 'Manager', 1, NULL)) as ManagerCount
from ...
2
45

Depends what you mean, but the other interpretation of the meaning is where you want to count rows with a certain value, but don't want to restrict the SELECT to JUST those rows...

You'd do it using SUM() with a clause in, like this instead of using COUNT(): e.g.

SELECT SUM(CASE WHEN Position = 'Manager' THEN 1 ELSE 0 END) AS ManagerCount,
    SUM(CASE WHEN Position = 'CEO' THEN 1 ELSE 0 END) AS CEOCount
FROM SomeTable
0
27

If using Postgres or SQLite, you can use the Filter clause to improve readability:

SELECT
  COUNT(1) FILTER (WHERE POSITION = 'Manager') AS ManagerCount,
  COUNT(1) FILTER (WHERE POSITION = 'Other') AS OtherCount
FROM ...

BigQuery also has Countif - see the support across different SQL dialects for these features here: https://modern-sql.com/feature/filter

0
13

You can also use the Pivot Keyword if you are using SQL 2005 or above

more info and from Technet

SELECT *
FROM @Users
PIVOT (
    COUNT(Position)
    FOR Position
    IN (Manager, CEO, Employee)
) as p

Test Data Set

DECLARE @Users TABLE (Position VARCHAR(10))
INSERT INTO @Users (Position) VALUES('Manager')
INSERT INTO @Users (Position) VALUES('Manager')
INSERT INTO @Users (Position) VALUES('Manager')
INSERT INTO @Users (Position) VALUES('CEO')
INSERT INTO @Users (Position) VALUES('Employee')
INSERT INTO @Users (Position) VALUES('Employee')
INSERT INTO @Users (Position) VALUES('Employee')
INSERT INTO @Users (Position) VALUES('Employee')
INSERT INTO @Users (Position) VALUES('Employee')
INSERT INTO @Users (Position) VALUES('Employee')
7

Do you mean just this:

SELECT Count(*) FROM YourTable WHERE Position = 'Manager'

If so, then yup that works!

1
  • 6
    The edit shows that he does not want to restrict the rows with a WHERE clause Nov 2, 2017 at 15:28
5

I know this is really old, but I like the NULLIF trick for such scenarios, and I found no downsides so far. Just see my copy&pasteable example, which is not very practical though, but demonstrates how to use it.

NULLIF might give you a small negative impact on performance, but I guess it should still be faster than subqueries.

DECLARE @tbl TABLE ( id [int] NOT NULL, field [varchar](50) NOT NULL)

INSERT INTO @tbl (id, field)
SELECT 1, 'Manager'
UNION SELECT 2, 'Manager'
UNION SELECT 3, 'Customer'
UNION SELECT 4, 'Boss'
UNION SELECT 5, 'Intern'
UNION SELECT 6, 'Customer'
UNION SELECT 7, 'Customer'
UNION SELECT 8, 'Wife'
UNION SELECT 9, 'Son'

SELECT * FROM @tbl

SELECT 
    COUNT(1) AS [total]
    ,COUNT(1) - COUNT(NULLIF([field], 'Manager')) AS [Managers]
    ,COUNT(NULLIF([field], 'Manager')) AS [NotManagers]
    ,(COUNT(1) - COUNT(NULLIF([field], 'Wife'))) + (COUNT(1) - COUNT(NULLIF([field], 'Son'))) AS [Family]
FROM @tbl

Comments appreciated :-)

2

Here is what I did to get a data set that included both the total and the number that met the criteria, within each shipping container. That let me answer the question "How many shipping containers have more than X% items over size 51"

select
   Schedule,
   PackageNum,
   COUNT (UniqueID) as Total,
   SUM (
   case
      when
         Size > 51 
      then
         1 
      else
         0 
   end
) as NumOverSize 
from
   Inventory 
where
   customer like '%PEPSI%' 
group by
   Schedule, PackageNum
2

In MySQL, boolean expressions evaluate to 0 or 1, so the following aggregation works:

select sum(Position = 'Manager') as ManagerCount
from ...
1

Note with PrestoDB SQL (from Facebook), there is a shortcut:

https://prestodb.io/docs/current/functions/aggregate.html

count_if(x) → bigint

Returns the number of TRUE input values. This function is equivalent to count(CASE WHEN x THEN 1 END)

0
SELECT COUNT(*) FROM bla WHERE Position = 'Manager'
1
  • 2
    No, question explicitly says "I want to do it in the count statement, not using WHERE"
    – JohnFlux
    Nov 18, 2020 at 5:38
-1

I think you can use a simple WHERE clause to select only the count some record.

3
  • Why do I get a down vote? After I answered (or may be the same time), many people answered the similar thing and they do not get any downvote. /:(
    – NawaMan
    Sep 9, 2009 at 14:50
  • 4
    You get a downvote because the question is "specify condition in Count" NOT "Count values by condition". So you are answering the wrong question
    – Radon8472
    Jul 8, 2015 at 7:41
  • 3
    Its a bit unfair to downvote the answer, when the answer was written it was a correct solution to the question.... he added the extra text 4 minutes after this answer!
    – Peter
    Oct 20, 2016 at 8:01

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