I have a table called Vehicle_Location containing the columns (and more):
ID NUMBER(10)
SEQUENCE_NUMBER NUMBER(10)
TIME DATE
and I'm trying to get the min/max/avg number of records per day per id.
So far, I have
select id, to_char(time), count(*) as c
from vehicle_location
group by id, to_char(time), min having id = 16
which gives me:
ID TO_CHAR(TIME) COUN开发者_如何转开发T(*)
---------------------- ------------- ----------------------
16 11-05-31 159
16 11-05-23 127
16 11-06-03 56
So I'd like to get the min/max/avg of the count(*) column. I am using Oracle as my RDBMS.
I don't have an oracle station to test on but you should be able to just wrap the aggregator around your SELECT
as a subquery/derived table/inline view
So it would be (UNTESTED!!)
SELECT
AVG(s.c)
, MIN(s.c)
, MAX(s.c)
, s.ID
FROM
--Note this is just your query
(select id, to_char(time), count(*) as c from vehicle_location group by id, to_char(time), min having id = 16) as s
GROUP BY s.ID
Here's some reading on it:
http://www.devshed.com/c/a/Oracle/Inserting-SubQueries-in-SELECT-Statements-in-Oracle/3/
EDIT: Though normally it is a bad idea to select both the MIN
and MAX
in a single query.
EDIT2: The min/max issue is related to how some RDBMS (including oracle) handle aggregations on indexed columns. It may not affect this particular query but the premise is that it's easy to use the index to find either the MIN
or the MAX
but not both at the same time because any index may not be used effectively.
Here's some reading on it:
http://momendba.blogspot.com/2008/07/min-and-max-functions-in-single-query.html
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