Spec-Zone .ru
спецификации, руководства, описания, API
|
In standard SQL, a query that includes a GROUP BY
clause cannot refer to
nonaggregated columns in the select list that are not named in the GROUP BY
clause.
For example, this query is illegal in standard SQL because the name
column in the
select list does not appear in the GROUP BY
:
SELECT o.custid, c.name, MAX(o.payment) FROM orders AS o, customers AS c WHERE o.custid = c.custid GROUP BY o.custid;
For the query to be legal, the name
column must be omitted from the select list or
named in the GROUP BY
clause.
MySQL extends the use of GROUP BY
so that the select list can refer to
nonaggregated columns not named in the GROUP BY
clause. This means that the
preceding query is legal in MySQL. You can use this feature to get better performance by avoiding unnecessary
column sorting and grouping. However, this is useful primarily when all values in each nonaggregated column not
named in the GROUP BY
are the same for each group. The server is free to choose any
value from each group, so unless they are the same, the values chosen are indeterminate. Furthermore, the
selection of values from each group cannot be influenced by adding an ORDER BY
clause. Sorting of the result set occurs after values have been chosen, and ORDER
BY
does not affect which values within each group the server chooses.
A similar MySQL extension applies to the HAVING
clause. In standard SQL, a query
that includes a GROUP BY
clause cannot refer to nonaggregated columns in the HAVING
clause that are not named in the GROUP BY
clause. A MySQL extension permits references to such columns to simplify calculations. This extension assumes
that the nongrouped columns will have the same group-wise values. Otherwise, the result is indeterminate.
To disable the MySQL GROUP BY
extension, enable the ONLY_FULL_GROUP_BY
SQL mode. This enables standard SQL behavior: Columns not
named in the GROUP BY
clause cannot be used in the select list or HAVING
clause unless enclosed in an aggregate function.
ONLY_FULL_GROUP_BY
also affects use of aliases in the HAVING
clauses. For example, the following query
returns name
values that occur only once in table orders
:
SELECT name, COUNT(name) FROM orders GROUP BY name HAVING COUNT(name) = 1;
MySQL extends this behavior to permit the use of an alias in the HAVING
clause for
the aggregated column:
SELECT name, COUNT(name) AS c FROM orders GROUP BY name HAVING c = 1;
Enabling ONLY_FULL_GROUP_BY
disables this MySQL extension and a non-grouping field 'c' is used in HAVING clause
error occurs because the column c
in the HAVING
clause
is not enclosed in an aggregate function (instead, it is an aggregate
function).
The select list extension also applies to ORDER BY
. That is, you can refer to
nonaggregated columns in the ORDER BY
clause that do not appear in the GROUP BY
clause. (However, as mentioned previously, ORDER
BY
does not affect which values are chosen from nonaggregated columns; it only sorts them after they
have been chosen.) This extension does not apply if the ONLY_FULL_GROUP_BY
SQL mode is enabled.
In some cases, you can use MIN()
and MAX()
to obtain a
specific column value even if it is not unique. If the sort
column contains
integers no larger than 6 digits, the following query gives the value of column
from the row containing the smallest sort
value:
SUBSTR(MIN(CONCAT(LPAD(sort,6,'0'),column)),7)
See Section 3.6.4, "The Rows Holding the Group-wise Maximum of a Certain Column".
If you are trying to follow standard SQL, you cannot use expressions in GROUP BY
clauses. As a workaround, use an alias for the expression:
SELECT id, FLOOR(value/100) AS val FROM tbl_name
GROUP BY id, val;
MySQL permits expressions in GROUP BY
clauses, so the alias is unnecessary:
SELECT id, FLOOR(value/100) FROM tbl_name
GROUP BY id, FLOOR(value/100);