How to find third or nth maximum salary from salary table(EmpID, EmpName, EmpSalary)
in optimized way?
56 Answers
Row Number :
SELECT Salary,EmpName
FROM
(
SELECT Salary,EmpName,ROW_NUMBER() OVER(ORDER BY Salary) As RowNum
FROM EMPLOYEE
) As A
WHERE A.RowNum IN (2,3)
Sub Query :
SELECT *
FROM Employee Emp1
WHERE (N-1) = (
SELECT COUNT(DISTINCT(Emp2.Salary))
FROM Employee Emp2
WHERE Emp2.Salary > Emp1.Salary
)
Top Keyword :
SELECT TOP 1 salary
FROM (
SELECT DISTINCT TOP n salary
FROM employee
ORDER BY salary DESC
) a
ORDER BY salary
-
how to get minimum salary record from table? select ins.KYS_ID , ins.FKYS_INS_ID from cmn_pat_x_insurance ins where ins.FKYS_PAT_ID='1253_717' and ins.FKYS_INS_TYPE in(1) and ins.BOL_TYPE in(1,3) and ins.salary in (min(ins.salary)) Commented Dec 11, 2013 at 5:31
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Kumar and Alexander, i want to get one more field with it, how to do that? my query is like """Select Top 1 NoteID From ( Select DateDiff(Year,SchedualDate, Current_TimeStamp) as NoteAge, Distinct Top 3 NoteID From [dbo].[DocSecheduale] Order by NoteID Desc )a Order by NoteID""" Commented Mar 25, 2014 at 12:29
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I'm finding nth highest salary but i am getting complexity to understand the sub-query, would you like to explain the sub-query ... Commented Mar 10, 2015 at 11:51
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@deepak_java the subquery is evaluated each and every time a row is processed by the outer query. In other words, the inner query can not be processed independently of the outer query since the inner query uses the Emp1 value as well. Commented Mar 11, 2015 at 3:30
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Its important to understand why the
... WHERE (N-1) = (Subquery)...
works. The subquery is a correlated query since itsWHERE
clause usesEmp1
from main query. The subquery is evaluated each time main query scans over a row. Example, if we are to find 3rd largest salary (N=3) from (800, 1000, 700, 750), the subquery for 1st row would beSELECT COUNT(DISTINCT(Emp2.Salary)) FROM Employee Emp2 WHERE Emp2.Salary > 800
which is 0. For 4th salary value (750)... WHERE Emp2.Salary > 750
will be 2, or N-1, hence this row will be returned. Commented Sep 4, 2016 at 18:46
Use ROW_NUMBER
(if you want a single) or DENSE_RANK
(for all related rows):
WITH CTE AS
(
SELECT EmpID, EmpName, EmpSalary,
RN = ROW_NUMBER() OVER (ORDER BY EmpSalary DESC)
FROM dbo.Salary
)
SELECT EmpID, EmpName, EmpSalary
FROM CTE
WHERE RN = @NthRow
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how to get minimum salary record from table? select ins.KYS_ID , ins.FKYS_INS_ID from cmn_pat_x_insurance ins where ins.FKYS_PAT_ID='1253_717' and ins.FKYS_INS_TYPE in(1) and ins.BOL_TYPE in(1,3) and ins.salary in (min(ins.salary)) Commented Dec 11, 2013 at 5:32
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Imagine , there are 10,0000 records in employee table. If I use the above query , the performance will be reduced by 6-10 times. Commented Nov 27, 2017 at 6:50
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2@BimalDas: then you don't have an index on the
EmpSalary
column. Also, reduced compared to what? The advantage of theROW_NUMBER
approach is that you can use..OVER(PARTITION BY GroupColumn OrderBy OrderColumn)
. So you can use it to get groups but still access any column of it. Commented Nov 27, 2017 at 9:14 -
2@BimalDas: No, it's not creating a temporary table. A cte is normally not materialized anywhere. It's more like an inline view or named subquery. Commented Nov 27, 2017 at 11:14
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2@KennyLJ: well, this was a SQL-Server question and
LIMIT
is MySql. In MS-SQL-Server you need a sub-query or CTE because you can't useROW_NUMBER
in theWHERE
. Why you can’t useROW_NUMBER()
In theWHERE
Clause Commented Feb 8, 2018 at 8:53
Try this
SELECT TOP 1 salary FROM (
SELECT TOP 3 salary
FROM employees
ORDER BY salary DESC) AS emp
ORDER BY salary ASC
For 3 you can replace any value...
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does this work with oracle 10g or 11g? Or is there an alternative which is pretty like this?– RBzCommented Sep 28, 2018 at 12:15
If you want optimize way means use TOP
Keyword, So the nth max and min salaries query as follows but the queries look like a tricky as in reverse order by using aggregate function names:
N maximum salary:
SELECT MIN(EmpSalary)
FROM Salary
WHERE EmpSalary IN(SELECT TOP N EmpSalary FROM Salary ORDER BY EmpSalary DESC)
for Ex: 3 maximum salary:
SELECT MIN(EmpSalary)
FROM Salary
WHERE EmpSalary IN(SELECT TOP 3 EmpSalary FROM Salary ORDER BY EmpSalary DESC)
N minimum salary:
SELECT MAX(EmpSalary)
FROM Salary
WHERE EmpSalary IN(SELECT TOP N EmpSalary FROM Salary ORDER BY EmpSalary ASC)
for Ex: 3 minimum salary:
SELECT MAX(EmpSalary)
FROM Salary
WHERE EmpSalary IN(SELECT TOP 3 EmpSalary FROM Salary ORDER BY EmpSalary ASC)
-
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4to get the max salary why we are doing in ASC order , it has to be done in DESC order , if we have salary like this 7000,10000,11000,500,800,900,12000 , then inner query of sorting will result in top3 that means 500,800,900 and max of these is 900, but 900 is not the 3 maximum , 3 maximum salary is 10000. Commented Feb 28, 2018 at 18:55
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1for Ex: 3 maximum salaries: It has to be like that SELECT Min(EmpSalary) FROM Salary WHERE EmpSalary IN(SELECT TOP 3 EmpSalary FROM Salary ORDER BY EmpSalary DESC) Commented Aug 6, 2018 at 17:57
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Too simple if you use the sub query!
SELECT MIN(EmpSalary) from (
SELECT EmpSalary from Employee ORDER BY EmpSalary DESC LIMIT 3
);
You can here just change the nth value after the LIMIT constraint.
Here in this the Sub query Select EmpSalary from Employee Order by EmpSalary DESC Limit 3; would return the top 3 salaries of the Employees. Out of the result we will choose the Minimum salary using MIN command to get the 3rd TOP salary of the employee.
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Getting this error. Error Code : 1248 Every derived table must have its own alias– user5347751Commented Nov 3, 2015 at 4:08
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add an alias to it.. SELECT MIN(EmpSalary) from ( SELECT EmpSalary from Employee ORDER BY EmpSalary DESC LIMIT 3 ) as s; Commented Nov 3, 2015 at 19:19
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Just use DISTINCT to avoid duplicates SELECT MIN(EmpSalary) from ( SELECT DISTINCT(EmpSalary) from Employee ORDER BY EmpSalary DESC LIMIT 3 ); Commented Mar 22, 2018 at 6:04
Replace N with your Max Number
SELECT *
FROM Employee Emp1
WHERE (N-1) = (
SELECT COUNT(DISTINCT(Emp2.Salary))
FROM Employee Emp2
WHERE Emp2.Salary > Emp1.Salary)
Explanation
The query above can be quite confusing if you have not seen anything like it before – the inner query is what’s called a correlated sub-query because the inner query (the subquery) uses a value from the outer query (in this case the Emp1 table) in it’s WHERE clause.
And Source
-
2+1 Its important to understand why the
... WHERE (N-1) = (Subquery)...
works. The subquery is a correlated query since itsWHERE
clause usesEmp1
from main query. The subquery is evaluated each time main query scans over a row. Example, if we are to find 3rd largest salary (N=3) from (800, 1000, 700, 750), the subquery for 1st row would beSELECT COUNT(DISTINCT(Emp2.Salary)) FROM Employee Emp2 WHERE Emp2.Salary > 800
which is 0. For 4th salary value (750)... WHERE Emp2.Salary > 750
will be 2, or N-1, hence this row will be returned. Commented Sep 4, 2016 at 18:49 -
SELECT COUNT(DISTINCT(Emp2.Salary)) FROM Employee Emp2 WHERE Emp2.Salary > 800 which is 0.
It will be 1.– ShadCommented Dec 20, 2020 at 9:16
Third or nth maximum salary from salary table without using subquery
select salary from salary
ORDER BY salary DESC
OFFSET N-1 ROWS
FETCH NEXT 1 ROWS ONLY
For 3rd highest salary put 2 in place of N-1
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3Important to mention that OFFSET FETCH is available from SQL Server 2012 + version. Commented Aug 31, 2015 at 12:57
SELECT Salary,EmpName
FROM
(
SELECT Salary,EmpName,DENSE_RANK() OVER(ORDER BY Salary DESC) Rno from EMPLOYEE
) tbl
WHERE Rno=3
SELECT EmpSalary
FROM salary_table
GROUP BY EmpSalary
ORDER BY EmpSalary DESC LIMIT n-1, 1;
Refer following query for getting nth highest salary. By this way you get nth highest salary in MYSQL. If you want get nth lowest salary only you need to replace DESC by ASC in the query.
-
1
Method 1:
SELECT TOP 1 salary FROM (
SELECT TOP 3 salary
FROM employees
ORDER BY salary DESC) AS emp
ORDER BY salary ASC
Method 2:
Select EmpName,salary from
(
select EmpName,salary ,Row_Number() over(order by salary desc) as rowid
from EmpTbl)
as a where rowid=3
-
Method 1 can be sort: SELECT TOP 1 SALARY FROM (SELECT TOP 3 SALARY FROM EMPLOYEES) *reason- because by default its ascending order Commented Mar 15, 2019 at 16:25
In 2008 we can use ROW_NUMBER() OVER (ORDER BY EmpSalary DESC) to get a rank without ties that we can use.
For example we can get the 8th highest this way, or change @N to something else or use it as a parameter in a function if you like.
DECLARE @N INT = 8;
WITH rankedSalaries AS
(
SELECT
EmpID
,EmpName
,EmpSalary,
,RN = ROW_NUMBER() OVER (ORDER BY EmpSalary DESC)
FROM salary
)
SELECT
EmpID
,EmpName
,EmpSalary
FROM rankedSalaries
WHERE RN = @N;
In SQL Server 2012 as you might know this is performed more intuitively using LAG().
Answering this question from the point of view of SQL Server as this is posted in the SQL Server section.
There many approaches of getting Nth salary and we can classify these approaches in two sections one using ANSI SQL approach and other using TSQL approach. You can also check out this find nth highest salary youtube video which shows things practically. Let’s try to cover three ways of writing this SQL.
- Approach number 1: - ANSI SQL: - Using Simple order by and top keyword.
- Approach number 2: - ANSI SQL: - Using Co-related subqueries.
- Approach number 3: - TSQL: - using Fetch Next
Approach number 1: - Using simple order by and top.
In this approach we will using combination of order by and top keyword. We can divide our thinking process in to 4 steps: -
Step 1: - Descending :- Whatever data we have first make it descending by using order by clause.
Step 2:- Then use TOP keyword and select TOP N. Where N stands for which highest salary rank you want.
Step 3: - Ascending: - Make the data ascending.
Step 4:- Select top 1 .There you are done.
So, if you put down the above 4 logical steps in SQL it comes up something as shown below.
Below is the text of SQL in case you want to execute and test the same.
select top 1 * from (select top 2 EmployeeSalary from tblEmployee order by EmployeeSalary desc) as innerquery order by EmployeeSalary asc
Parameterization issue of Approach number 1
One of the biggest issues of Approach number 1 is “PARAMETERIZATION”.
If you want to wrap up the above SQL in to a stored procedure and give input which top salary you want as a parameter, it would be difficult by Approach number 1.
One of the things you can do with Approach number 1 is make it a dynamic SQL but that would not be an elegant solution. Let’s check out Approach number 2 which is an ANSI SQL approach.
Approach number 2: - Using Co-related subqueries.
Below is how co-related subquery solution will look like. In case you are new to Co-related subquery. Co-related subquery is a query which a query inside query. The outer query first evaluates, sends the record to the inner query, inner query then evaluates and sends it to the outer query.
“3” in the query is the top salary we want to find out.
Select E1.EmployeeSalary from tblEmployee as E1 where 3=(Select count(*) from tblEmployee as E2 Where E2.EmployeeSalary>=E1.EmployeeSalary)
So in the above query we have an outer query:-
Select E1.EmployeeSalary from tblEmployee as E1
and inner query is in the where clause. Watch those BOLD’s which indicate how the outer table alias is referred in the where clause which makes co-related evaluate inner and outer query to and fro: -
where 3=(Select count(*) from tblEmployee as E2 Where E2.EmployeeSalary>=E1.EmployeeSalary)
So now let’s say you have records like 3000, 4000 ,1000 and 100 so below will be the steps: -
- First 3000 will be send to the inner query.
- Inner query will now check how many record values are greater than or equal to 3000. If the number of record counts is not equal, it will take next value which is 4000. Now for 3000 there are only 2 values which is greater than or equal, 3000 and 4000. So, Is number record count 2>-=3? .NO, so it takes second value which is 4000.
- Again for 4000 how many record values are greater than or equal. If the number of record count is not equal, it will take next value which is 1000.
- Now 1000 has 3 records more or equal than 1000, (3000,4000 and 1000 himself). This is where co-related stops and exits and gives the final output.
Approach number 3: - TSQL fetch and Next.
Third approach is by using TSQL. By using Fetch and Next, we can get the Nth highest easily.
But please do note, TSQL code will not work for other databases we will need to rewrite the whole code again.
It would be a three-step process:-
Step 1 Distinct and Order by descending: - First apply distinct and order by which made the salaries descending as well as weed off the duplicates.
Step 2 Use Offset: - Use TSQL Offset and get the top N-1 rows. Where N is the highest salary we want to get. Offset takes the number of rows specified, leaving the other rows. Why (N-1) because it starts from zero.
Step 3 Use Fetch: - Use fetch and get the first row. That row has the highest salary.
The SQL looks something as shown below.
Performance comparison
Below is the SQL plan for performance comparison. Below is the plan for top and order by.
Below is the plan for co-related queries. You can see the number of operators are quiet high in numbers. So surely co-related would perform bad for huge data.
Below is TSQL query plan which is better than cor-related.
So, summing up we can compare more holistically as given in the below table.
declare @maxNthSal as nvarchar(20)
SELECT TOP 3 @maxNthSal=GRN_NAME FROM GRN_HDR ORDER BY GRN_NAME DESC
print @maxNthSal
To get third highest value from table
SELECT * FROM tableName ORDER BY columnName DESC LIMIT 2, 1
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SELECT Distinct columnName FROM tableName ORDER BY columnName DESC LIMIT 2, 1 Commented Nov 8, 2019 at 17:17
This is one of the popular question in any SQL interview. I am going to write down different queries to find out the nth highest value of a column.
I have created a table named “Emloyee” by running the below script.
CREATE TABLE Employee([Eid] [float] NULL,[Ename] [nvarchar](255) NULL,[Basic_Sal] [float] NULL)
Now I am going to insert 8 rows into this table by running below insert statement.
insert into Employee values(1,'Neeraj',45000)
insert into Employee values(2,'Ankit',5000)
insert into Employee values(3,'Akshay',6000)
insert into Employee values(4,'Ramesh',7600)
insert into Employee values(5,'Vikas',4000)
insert into Employee values(7,'Neha',8500)
insert into Employee values(8,'Shivika',4500)
insert into Employee values(9,'Tarun',9500)
Now we will find out 3rd highest Basic_sal from the above table using different queries. I have run the below query in management studio and below is the result.
select * from Employee order by Basic_Sal desc
We can see in the above image that 3rd highest Basic Salary would be 8500. I am writing 3 different ways of doing the same. By running all three mentioned below queries we will get same result i.e. 8500.
First Way: - Using row number function
select Ename,Basic_sal
from(
select Ename,Basic_Sal,ROW_NUMBER() over (order by Basic_Sal desc) as rowid from Employee
)A
where rowid=2
Select TOP 1 Salary as '3rd Highest Salary' from (SELECT DISTINCT TOP 3 Salary from Employee ORDER BY Salary DESC) a ORDER BY Salary ASC;
I am showing 3rd highest salary
SELECT MIN(COLUMN_NAME)
FROM (
SELECT DISTINCT TOP 3 COLUMN_NAME
FROM TABLE_NAME
ORDER BY
COLUMN_NAME DESC
) AS 'COLUMN_NAME'
--nth highest salary
select *
from (select lstName, salary, row_number() over( order by salary desc) as rn
from employee) tmp
where rn = 2
--(nth -1) highest salary
select *
from employee e1
where 1 = (select count(distinct salary)
from employee e2
where e2.Salary > e1.Salary )
Optimized way: Instead of subquery just use limit.
select distinct salary from employee order by salary desc limit nth, 1;
See limit syntax here http://www.mysqltutorial.org/mysql-limit.aspx
By subquery:
SELECT salary from
(SELECT rownum ID, EmpSalary salary from
(SELECT DISTINCT EmpSalary from salary_table order by EmpSalary DESC)
where ID = nth)
Try this Query
SELECT DISTINCT salary
FROM emp E WHERE
&no =(SELECT COUNT(DISTINCT salary)
FROM emp WHERE E.salary <= salary)
Put n= which value you want
set @n = $n
SELECT a.* FROM ( select a.* , @rn = @rn+1 from EMPLOYEE order by a.EmpSalary desc ) As a where rn = @n
MySQL tested solution, assume N = 4:
select min(CustomerID) from (SELECT distinct CustomerID FROM Customers order by CustomerID desc LIMIT 4) as A;
Another example:
select min(country) from (SELECT distinct country FROM Customers order by country desc limit 3);
Try this code :-
SELECT *
FROM one one1
WHERE ( n ) = ( SELECT COUNT( one2.salary )
FROM one one2
WHERE one2.salary >= one1.salary
)
Find Nth highest salary from a table. Here is a way to do this task using dense_rank() function.
select linkorder from u_links
select max(linkorder) from u_links
select max(linkorder) from u_links where linkorder < (select max(linkorder) from u_links)
select top 1 linkorder
from ( select distinct top 2 linkorder from u_links order by linkorder desc) tmp
order by linkorder asc
DENSE_RANK : 1. DENSE_RANK computes the rank of a row in an ordered group of rows and returns the rank as a NUMBER. The ranks are consecutive integers beginning with 1. 2. This function accepts arguments as any numeric data type and returns NUMBER. 3. As an analytic function, DENSE_RANK computes the rank of each row returned from a query with respect to the other rows, based on the values of the value_exprs in the order_by_clause. 4. In the above query the rank is returned based on sal of the employee table. In case of tie, it assigns equal rank to all the rows.
WITH result AS (
SELECT linkorder ,DENSE_RANK() OVER ( ORDER BY linkorder DESC ) AS DanseRank
FROM u_links )
SELECT TOP 1 linkorder FROM result WHERE DanseRank = 5
In SQL Server 2012+, OFFSET...FETCH would be an efficient way to achieve this:
DECLARE @N AS INT;
SET @N = 3;
SELECT
EmpSalary
FROM
dbo.Salary
ORDER BY
EmpSalary DESC
OFFSET (@N-1) ROWS
FETCH NEXT 1 ROWS ONLY
select * from employee order by salary desc;
+------+------+------+-----------+
| id | name | age | salary |
+------+------+------+-----------+
| 5 | AJ | 20 | 100000.00 |
| 4 | Ajay | 25 | 80000.00 |
| 2 | ASM | 28 | 50000.00 |
| 3 | AM | 22 | 50000.00 |
| 1 | AJ | 24 | 30000.00 |
| 6 | Riu | 20 | 20000.00 |
+------+------+------+-----------+
select distinct salary from employee e1 where (n) = (select count( distinct(salary) ) from employee e2 where e1.salary<=e2.salary);
Replace n with the nth highest salary as number.
SELECT TOP 1 salary FROM ( SELECT TOP n salary FROM employees ORDER BY salary DESC Group By salary ) AS emp ORDER BY salary ASC
(where n for nth maximum salary)
Just change the inner query value: E.g Select Top (2)* from Student_Info order by ClassID desc
Use for both problem:
Select Top (1)* from
(
Select Top (1)* from Student_Info order by ClassID desc
) as wsdwe
order by ClassID
SELECT salary FROM (SELECT salary FROM employee ORDER BY salary DESC FETCH NEXT 3 ROWS ONLY) ORDER BY salary ASC FETCH NEXT 1 ROWS ONLY;