I am trying to get the max value within an inline view , but it is returning me the maximum value within the inline view as if the inline view had no TOP clause.
The table dbo.Details in query below contains 650 records. I need to get the max value for top 200 records, but query below gets me the max value over all records in Details table for BatchNumber = 341.
Is there some subtle point that I am missing? My goal is to get the max value within TOP(200) records. I am using SQL Server 2008 R2.
SELECT MAX(a.DetailsRecordID) FROM (SELECT TOP(200) npd.DetailsRecordID,
npd.BatchNumber FROM dbo.Details npd WHERE npd.BatchNumber = 341) a
Top 200 based on nothing. There is no order by.
Even a table with a clustered PK there is no guaranteed order without an order by.
Related
I use knexjs and postgresql. Is it possible in knexjs to get the total of records from the same query in which the limit is used?
For example:
knex.select().from('project').limit(50)
Is it possible to somehow get the total number of records in the same query if there are more than 50?
The question arose due to the fact that my query is much more complex, which uses a lot of subqueries and conditions, and I would not like to make this query twice to get the data in one query and the total number of records (I use the .count() method) from another.
I do not know your obscurification manager (knexjs?) but I would think you should be able to add the window version of the count() function to your select list. In plain SQL something like: Where ... represents your current select list. (see demo)
select ..., count(*) over() total_rows
from project
limit 5;
This works because the window count function counts all rows selected, after all rows selected, but before the LIMIT clause is applied. Note: This adds a column to the result set with the same value in every row.
I want to calculate the difference between the previous and the current column and make it a new column named increase. For this, I'm using the lag window function. The value of the first column is not defined since no previous column exists. I know that a 3rd parameter specifies the default value. However, it depends. For the first row, I want to use the value of another column e.g. the one of count from that current row. This assumes that 0 is increased to count for the first row which is what I need. Specifying the column name as 3rd argument for the lag function does not work correctly and neither does using 0. How can it be done? I'm getting strange results such as quite a random result or even negative numbers.
SELECT *, mycount - lag(mycount, 1) OVER (ORDER BY id, messtime ASC) AS increase FROM measurements;
Window functions cannot be nested either:
ERROR: window function calls cannot be nested
There is another issue with your query: So far your results are in random order, so you may think you are seeing problems that don't exist.
Add ORDER BY id, messtime to your query to see the rows in order. Now you can compare one row with its predecessor directly. Are there still issues? If so, which exactly?
SELECT *, "count" - lag("count", 1) OVER (ORDER BY id, messtime) AS increase
FROM measurements
ORDER BY id, messtime;
COUNT is a reserved word in SQL. It seems the DBMS thinks you want to nest COUNT and LAG somehow.
Use another column name or use quotes for the column:
SELECT *, "count" - lag("count", 1) OVER
From every references that I search how to do cumulative sum / running total. they said it's better using windows function, so I did
select grandtotal,sum(grandtotal)over(order by agentname) from call
but I realize that the results are okay as long as the value of each rows are different. Here is the result :
Is There anyway to fix this?
You might want to review the documentation on window specifications (which is here). The default is "range between" which defines the range by the values in the row. You want "rows between":
select grandtotal,
sum(grandtotal) over (order by agentname rows between unbounded preceding and current row)
from call;
Alternatively, you could include an id column in the sort to guarantee uniqueness and not have to deal with the issue of equal key values.
I just started using MySQL Workbench (6.1). The default limit for queries is 1,000 and that's fine I want to keep that.
But the results from the action output message will therefore always say "1000 rows returned".
Is there a setting to see the number of records that would be returned in the query had their been no limit? For sanity checking query results?
I know this is late by a few years, but I think you're asking for a way to see total row count in the bottom of the results pane, like in SQL Server. In SQL Server, you would also go in the messages pane and it would say how many rows were returned. I was actually looking for exactly what you were asking for as well, and seems like there is no way to find that. If you have an ID in your table that is just numeric and is in numeric order, you could order by ID desc and look at the biggest number there. That is what I've decided to do.
The result is not always "1000 rows returned". If there are less records than that you will get the actual count. If you want to know the total number of rows in a table do a select count(*) from table. Alternatively, you can switch off the automatic limit and have all records returned by MySQL Workbench, but that can be time + memory consuming for large tables.
I think removing the row limit will help. By default, MySQL workbench will limit the result set to 1000 rows but you can always disable the limit. Check out https://superuser.com/questions/240291/how-to-remove-1000-row-limit-in-mysql-workbench-queries on how to do that.
You can run a second query to check that
select count(*) from (your original query) as t;
this will return the total rows in actual result.
You can use the SQL count function. It returns the count of the total number of rows a query returns.
A sample query:
select count(*) from tableName where field1 = value1
In workbench, in the dropdown menu at the top, set it to dont limit Then run the query to extract data from table Then under the output pane below, the total count of the query results will be displayed in the message column
I am trying to sort the retrieved data in the result grid in MySQL Workbench.
E.g. with the query
SELECT * FROM deepmining.prediction
WHERE (search_id = 39 OR search_id = 41) AND lead = 10 AND lag = 10 ;
I get in the result grid, when I sort on the column scale and timeshift (sorting using the result grid UI, not modifying the SQL query):
Shouldn't the first two rows be:
instead, just as if I had appended ORDER BY timeshift, scale; to the SQL query?
Or does sort MySQL Workbench sorting on multiple columns, despite what the UI seems to indicate by the presence of an arrow on the columns scale and timeshift?
The sort order depends on the order how you clicked the headers. The first click is used for the primary sort, the second for the sorting within the primary and so on. See the following images:
Sorted by first clicking on last_name then first_name.
Sorted by first clicking on first_name then last_name.