I know that if you have one aggregate function in a SELECT statement, then all the other values in the statement must be either aggregate functions, or listed in a GROUP BY clause. I don't understand why that's the case.
If I do:
SELECT Name, 'Jones' AS Surname FROM People
I get:
NAME SURNAME
Dave Jones
Susan Jones
Amy Jones
So, the DBMS has taken a value from each row, and appended a single value to it in the result set. That's fine. But if that works, why can't I do:
SELECT Name, COUNT(Name) AS Surname FROM People
It seems like the same idea, take a value from each row and append a single value. But instead of:
NAME SURNAME
Dave 3
Susan 3
Amy 3
I get:
You tried to execute a query that does not include the specified expression 'ContactName' as part of an aggregate function.
I know it's not allowed, but the two circumstances seem so similar that I don't understand why. Is it to make the DBMS easier to implement? If anyone can explain to me why it doesn't work like I think it should, I'd be very grateful.
count(Name)
to mean in that query?GROUP BY
either explicitely or implicitely (by using aggregate functions in theSELECT
part), you can't have both.PARTITION BY
in anOVER ()
clause, which tend to appear closer together in a query, and thing may begin to click into place. I sometimes wish SQL was a little less structured :)