0

i have the data in my table as follows,

+----+-----+
| ID | Qty |
+----+-----+
|  1 | 100 |
|  2 | 200 |
|  3 | 150 |
|  4 |  50 |
+----+-----+

i need the result as follows,

+----+-----+-------+
| ID | Qty | C.Qty |
+----+-----+-------+
|  1 | 100 |   100 |
|  2 | 200 |   300 |
|  3 | 150 |   450 |
|  4 |  50 |   500 |
+----+-----+-------+

the result of third column will be the sum of previous rows, please any one help....

4
  • I don't understand...where does the 500 come from? Nov 15, 2013 at 6:34
  • @PaulDraper 450+50=500..
    – Linga
    Nov 15, 2013 at 6:36
  • It' already been answered here
    – remigio
    Nov 15, 2013 at 6:36
  • Oh...he meant previous rows, not columns. I'll correct it. Nov 15, 2013 at 6:37

4 Answers 4

2

I would just use a subquery:

SELECT ID, Qty,
   (SELECT SUM(Qty) FROM [My Table] b WHERE b.ID <= [My Table].ID) AS [Total Qty]
FROM [My Table]
0
2

Please try:

SELECT S1.ID, S1.Qty ,sum(S2.Qty) CUM_SUM
FROM YourTable S1 join YourTable S2
on S1.ID>=S2.ID
group by S1.ID, S1.Qty
ORDER BY S1.ID
1
 SELECT ID, Qty,
 SUM(Qty) OVER(ORDER BY ID 
 ROWS BETWEEN UNBOUNDED PRECEDING AND CURRENT ROW) 
      AS C.QTY
 FROM Table
2
  • Looks interesting. What database server is this for?
    – David
    Nov 15, 2013 at 6:36
  • @David Sql Server 2012 (not supported prior). Not sure when oracle started supporting it. Works in at least 11g. Wouldn't be surprised if it worked postgresql. Definitely won't work in MySQL Nov 15, 2013 at 6:42
0

try this:

select a.id,a.qty,sum(b.qty) as total_qty
from table a cross join table b
where b.id <= a.id
group by a.id,a.qty 
order by a.id

demo

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