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i have two table alamat_penerima and lokasi

alamat penerima table [this is my recordenter image description here

and then

lokasi table [this is the recordenter image description here

i wont to make two table like this [view]

enter image description here

I hope you can help me

i have just try this query command :

            SELECT COUNT(alamat_penerima.`nama_penerima`) AS penerima, lokasi.`wilayah`
        FROM lokasi
        INNER JOIN alamat_penerima ON alamat_penerima.`kota_kab` = lokasi.`wilayah`
        GROUP BY alamat_penerima.`kota_kab`

but the result is

result

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  • 3
    Please abstain from using images - type your text so we could copy&paste it to solve your problem. Take the time to describe your tables, describe the "connction" between them and your expected outcome. Supply any SQL you tried that does not work. If you have the DDL at hand, copy it into the question as well. Dec 17, 2017 at 12:07
  • Just as a pointer: use INNER JOIN to join your tables and a GROUP BY together with COUNT(...) to get an aggregate count over grouped by columns Dec 17, 2017 at 12:11
  • Welcome to Stack Overflow. Please read this. meta.stackoverflow.com/a/271056 Often, the work of writing a good question can help you clarify your problem well enough to solve it.
    – O. Jones
    Dec 17, 2017 at 12:44

1 Answer 1

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Your question is difficult to understand, so this answer is guesswork. It looks to me like you hope to list the number of recipient addresses in each region, but also show the regions with no addresses.

To do that, you need two subqueries joined together.

This subquery generates the names of all regions.

                 SELECT DISTINCT wilayah FROM lokasi

This subquery generates a list of regions with the count of addresses in each region. The result set from this subquery, however, omits regions with no addresses in them.

                SELECT COUNT(*) num, kota_kab AS wilayah
                  FROM alamat_penerima
                 GROUP BY kota_kab

You can test these subqueries individually to determine whether they are correct. It's important to do that.

Finally, you join these two together as if they were tables. (That's why it's called structured query language).

SELECT w.wilayah, a.num
  FROM (
                 SELECT DISTINCT wilayah FROM lokasi
       ) w
  LEFT JOIN (
                SELECT COUNT(*) num, kota_kab AS wilayah
                  FROM alamat_penerima
                 GROUP BY kota_kab
       ) a ON w.wilaya = a.wilaya

This will yield what you want, but showing NULL instead of 0 in rows with no addresses. (That's a result of using LEFT JOIN) You can put the 0 values there by using this as the first line of your query instead.

SELECT w.wilayah, IFNULL(a.num,0) num

The design trick is to make your first subquery determine the number of rows in your result set, then to use LEFT JOIN to put information from subsequent subqueries into your results.

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  • whoaa great!! thanks Dec 17, 2017 at 13:00

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