291

In a [member] table, some rows have the same value for the email column.

login_id | email
---------|---------------------
john     | [email protected]
peter    | [email protected]
johnny   | [email protected]
...

Some people used a different login_id but the same email address, no unique constraint was set on this column. Now I need to find these rows and see if they should be removed.

What SQL statement should I use to find these rows? (MySQL 5)

10 Answers 10

464

This query will give you a list of email addresses and how many times they're used, with the most used addresses first.

SELECT email,
       count(*) AS c
FROM TABLE
GROUP BY email
HAVING c > 1
ORDER BY c DESC

If you want the full rows:

select * from table where email in (
    select email from table
    group by email having count(*) > 1
)
8
  • 4
    count(1) works equally well, and is more performant. (Learned that trick from Stack Overflow ;-)
    – jpaugh
    Commented Jul 18, 2016 at 18:32
  • 6
    @jpaugh, might not want to use count(1) stackoverflow.com/questions/2710621/…
    – Storm
    Commented Jun 6, 2017 at 7:39
  • 1
    created what was essentially infinite recursion or something on mysql resulting in a dead database due to "too many connections" :-/
    – huygir
    Commented Mar 5, 2018 at 17:40
  • 2
    @jpaugh nowadays no performance difference between count(*) and count(1), query analyzers of DBMS are pretty smart and not going to load whole row to execute count(*). Test it yourself (and don't forget to disable cache before test).
    – kdmitry
    Commented Dec 25, 2022 at 18:27
  • 2
    How do I use multiple columns in group by and want full rows? Commented Oct 9, 2023 at 20:56
82
select email from mytable group by email having count(*) >1
2
18

Here is query to find email's which are used for more then one login_id:

SELECT email
FROM table
GROUP BY email
HAVING count(*) > 1

You'll need second (of nested) query to get list of login_id by email.

13

First part of accepted answer does not work for MSSQL.
This worked for me:

select email, COUNT(*) as C from table 
group by email having COUNT(*) >1 order by C desc
7

use this if your email column contains empty values

 select * from table where email in (
    select email from table group by email having count(*) > 1 and email != ''
    )
5

Thanks guys :-) I used the below because I only cared about those two columns and not so much about the rest. Worked great

  select email, login_id from table
    group by email, login_id
    having COUNT(email) > 1
3
  • 3
    In the case in question, COUNT(email) would always be 1, so you query will return nothing.
    – jutky
    Commented Jan 23, 2017 at 19:49
  • 2
    No, the query actually gave me the data I needed, which is distinctly the email and login_name of those who have the same email Commented Jun 20, 2019 at 13:38
  • 2
    If you group by email and login_id, you will count amount of rows for same email and login, and those are distinct in your example, so count will be always be 1. Here is the fiddle with your query that returns 0 rows: sqlfiddle.com/#!9/4bbcaf/3
    – jutky
    Commented Jun 22, 2019 at 20:36
5

This works best

Screenshot enter image description here

SELECT RollId, count(*) AS c 
    FROM `tblstudents` 
    GROUP BY RollId 
    HAVING c > 1 
    ORDER BY c DESC
1
  • simple and best, need to find similar phone number student and it worked.
    – Nero
    Commented Jun 27 at 6:29
4

I know this is a very old question but this is more for someone else who might have the same problem and I think this is more accurate to what was wanted.

SELECT * FROM member WHERE email = (Select email From member Where login_id = [email protected]) 

This will return all records that have [email protected] as a login_id value.

3

Get the entire record as you want using the condition with inner select query.

SELECT *
FROM   member
WHERE  email IN (SELECT email
                 FROM   member
                 WHERE  login_id = [email protected]) 
2

Very late to this thread, but I had a similar situation and the following worked on MySQL. The following query will also return all the rows that match the condition of duplicate emails

SELECT * FROM TABLE WHERE EMAIL IN 
       (SELECT * FROM 
            (SELECT EMAIL FROM TABLE GROUP BY EMAIL HAVING COUNT(EMAIL) > 1) 
        AS X);
0

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