45

I want to add columns that represent counts from other tables.

I have 3 tables.

Messages

MessageID    User      Message      Topic
1            Tom       Hi           ball
2            John      Hey          book
3            Mike      Sup          book
4            Mike      Ok           book

Topics

Topic      Title     Category1    Category2
ball       Sports    Action       Hot
book       School    Study        Hot

Stars_Given

starID     Topic
1          ball
2          book
3          book
4          book

I want to end up with:

Topic_Review

Topic    Title     StarCount    UserCount    MessageCount
ball     Sports    1            1            1
book     school    3            2            3

So basically I want to attach 3 columns with counts of unique values (number of stars given within each topic, unique users who have messages within topic, and the number of unique messages in each topic).

I want to eventually be able to filter on the categories (look in both columns) as well.

Also, I want to eventually sort by the counts that I join. Example, I'm going to have a button that sorts by "number of stars" by ascending order, or sort by "number of users" by descending order, etc.

I've tried adapting other people's answers and I can't get it to work properly.

1 Answer 1

120
select
  t.Topic,
  t.Title,
  count(distinct s.starID) as StarCount,
  count(distinct m.User) as UserCount,
  count(distinct m.messageID) as MessageCount
from
  Topics t
  left join Messages m ON m.Topic = t.Topic
  left join Stars_Given s ON s.Topic = t.Topic
group by
  t.Topic,
  t.Title

Sql Fiddle

Or, you can perform the aggregation in sub-queries, which will likely be more efficient if you have a substantial amount of data in the tables:

select
  t.Topic,
  t.Title,
  s.StarCount,
  m.UserCount,
  m.MessageCount
from
  Topics t
  left join (
    select 
      Topic, 
      count(distinct User) as UserCount,
      count(*) as MessageCount
    from Messages
    group by Topic
  ) m ON m.Topic = t.Topic
  left join (
    select
      Topic, 
      count(*) as StarCount
    from Stars_Given 
    group by Topic
  ) s ON s.Topic = t.Topic

Sql Fiddle

17
  • s.starID appears to be unique, so you shouldn't need a distinct on that column (but it's not 100% from the question) Mar 11, 2013 at 21:48
  • 6
    @MattBusche The distinct is needed in the first query because the joins to the multiple tables will throw off the counts without it (3 becomes 9). Mar 11, 2013 at 22:01
  • 5
    I was not aware you could use DISTINCT inside COUNT. Thank You. Sep 6, 2013 at 0:19
  • 2
    @Tom count(s.starID) won't count the number of unique values for s.starID... instead, this gives you the number of non-null values for starID before the grouping is applied. If you were to remove the grouping from the first SQL fiddle query, you'll see that there are 9 rows for Topic = 'book' and Title = 'School'... so unless distinct is added to the count, you'll instead be counting the number of rows with non-null values rather than the number of unique values. Nov 13, 2015 at 17:22
  • 4
    The use of DISTINCT in COUNT make difference in my queries with multiple LEFT JOINs. Thanks @MichaelFredrickson Jun 22, 2016 at 8:25

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