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SELECT COUNT(DISTINCT [name]) from several tables

开发者 https://www.devze.com 2023-03-20 11:15 出处:网络
I can perform the following SQL Server selection of distinct (or non-repeating names) 开发者_如何学运维from a column in one table like so:

I can perform the following SQL Server selection of distinct (or non-repeating names) 开发者_如何学运维from a column in one table like so:

SELECT COUNT(DISTINCT [Name]) FROM [MyTable]

But what if I have more than one table (all these tables contain the name field called [Name]) and I need to know the count of non-repeating names in two or more tables.

If I run something like this:

SELECT COUNT(DISTINCT [Name]) FROM [MyTable1], [MyTable2], [MyTable3]

I get an error, "Ambiguous column name 'Name'".

PS. All three tables [MyTable1], [MyTable2], [MyTable3] are a product of a previous selection.


After the clarification, use:

  SELECT x.name, COUNT(x.[name])
    FROM (SELECT [name]
            FROM [MyTable]
          UNION ALL
          SELECT [name]
            FROM [MyTable2]
          UNION ALL
          SELECT [name]
            FROM [MyTable3]) x
GROUP BY x.name

If I understand correctly, use:

  SELECT x.name, COUNT(DISTINCT x.[name])
    FROM (SELECT [name]
            FROM [MyTable]
          UNION ALL
          SELECT [name]
            FROM [MyTable2]
          UNION ALL
          SELECT [name]
            FROM [MyTable3]) x
GROUP BY x.name

UNION will remove duplicates; UNION ALL will not, and is faster for it.


EDIT: Had to change after seeing recent comment.

Does this give you what you want? This gives a count for each person after combining the rows from all tables.

SELECT [NAME], COUNT(*) as TheCount
FROM
    (
     SELECT [Name] FROM [MyTable1]
     UNION ALL
     SELECT [Name] FROM [MyTable2]
     UNION ALL
     SELECT [Name] FROM [MyTable3]
     ) AS [TheNames]
GROUP BY [NAME]


Here's another way:

SELECT x.name, SUM(x.cnt)
FROM ( SELECT [name], COUNT(*) AS cnt
       FROM [MyTable]
       GROUP BY [name]
     UNION ALL
       SELECT [name], COUNT(*) AS cnt
       FROM [MyTable2]
       GROUP BY [name]
     UNION ALL
       SELECT [name], COUNT(*) AS cnt
       FROM [MyTable3]
       GROUP BY [name]
     ) AS x
GROUP BY x.name


In case you have different amounts of columns per table, like:

  • table1 has 3 columns,
  • table2 has 2 columns,
  • table3 has 1 column

And you want to count the amount of distinct values of different column names, what it was useful to me in AthenaSQL was to use CROSS JOIN since your output would be only one row, it would be just 1 combination:

SELECT * FROM (
SELECT COUNT(DISTINCT name1) as amt_name1,
       COUNT(DISTINCT name2) as amt_name2,
       COUNT(DISTINCT name3) as amt_name3,
FROM table1 ) t1
CROSS JOIN
(SELECT COUNT(DISTINCT name4) as amt_name4,
        COUNT(DISTINCT name5) as amt_name5,
        MAX(t3.amt_name6) as amt_name6
 FROM table2
 CROSS JOIN
 (SELECT COUNT(DISTINCT name6) as amt_name6
  FROM table3) t3) t2

Would return a table with one row and their counts:

amt_name1 | amt_name2 | amt_name3 | amt_name4 | amt_name5 | amt_name6
    4123  |    675    |    564    |    2346   |   18667   |    74567
0

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