Introduction to SQL Grouping and Totaling
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One of the most powerful aspects of SQL is the ability to perform data aggregation. Two of the most powerful SQL data aggregation tools are grouping and totaling. In this guide, you learn SQL data aggregation using grouping and totaling.
SQL Aggregate Functions
In SQL, aggregation is the process of operating or calculating a set of values. The intent is to return a single summary value. SQL includes several very powerful Aggregate Functions such as AVG()
, COUNT()
, SUM()
, MAX()
, and MIN()
. These functions, in turn, are most often found in SQL statements that implement a GROUP BY
clause. However, these functions do not need to be associated with that clause.
This guide uses a CourseTaken
table to demonstrate aggregate functions. From the command line, create the CourseTaken
table.
CREATE TABLE CourseTaken (
SSNumber CHAR(9) NOT NULL,
CourseId CHAR(6) NOT NULL,
NumericGrade INT NOT NULL,
YearTaken INT NOT NULL
);
The CourseTaken
table contains the following column data:
SSNumber | CourseId | NumericGrade | YearTaken |
---|---|---|---|
111111111 | CSC101 | 98 | 2021 |
111111111 | ENG101 | 95 | 2022 |
222222222 | CSC101 | 100 | 2022 |
222222222 | EEE101 | 75 | 2022 |
333333333 | POL101 | 92 | 2021 |
333333333 | CSC101 | 84 | 2022 |
Use a SQL Aggregate Function to Calculate a Single Summary Value
The sections below provide different examples that use aggregate functions to return a single summary value. All examples use the CourseTaken
table that was created in the Aggregate Functions section of the guide.
Example 1:
In this example, the aggregate function returns a numerical average grade for all students taking the course CSC101
in the year 2022.
SELECT AVG(NumericGrade) AS 'Avg Grade'
FROM CourseTaken
WHERE CourseId = 'CSC101
AND YearTaken = 2022;
SQL returns the following average grade:
Avg Grade
---------
92
Example 2:
The aggregate function below returns a count of the number of students that took course CSC101
before the year 2022.
SELECT COUNT(SSNumber) AS 'Student Count'
FROM CourseTaken
WHERE CourseId = 'CSC101'
AND YearTaken < 2022;
The following count is returned:
Student Count
---------
1
Example 3:
In this example, an aggregate function is used to obtain the maximum numeric grade recorded in any year by a Student taking CSC101
.
SELECT MAX(NumericGrade) AS 'Max Grade'
FROM CourseTaken
WHERE CourseId = 'CSC101'
The returned maximum grade is the following:
Max Grade
---------
100
Aggregate Data Using Group Functions
The following examples demonstrate the use of the GROUP BY
clause using the data from the CourseTaken
table.
Example 1:
The example below determines the average grade for each student for all courses that they have taken to date. To execute this, use the SQL Group By
clause to group by Student (in this case, the SSNumber
column).
SELECT SSNumber, AVG(NumericGrade) AS 'Avg Grade'
FROM CourseTaken
GROUP BY SSNumber
The output returns the average grade for each student.
+-----------+----------+
| SSNumber | Avg Grade|
+-----------+----------+
| 111111111 | 96.5 |
| 222222222 | 87.5 |
| 333333333 | 88 |
+-----------+----------+
Example 2:
The aggregate function below finds the average grade received across every CourseId
in the CourseTaken
table. To do this, group by CourseId
within YearTaken
with the following SQL code:
SELECT CourseId AS 'Course', YearTaken AS 'Year',
AVG(NumericGrade) AS 'Avg Grade'
FROM CourseTaken
GROUP BY CourseId, YearTaken
ORDER BY CourseId, YearTaken
You should see the following output:
+--------+------+-----------+
| Course | Year | Avg Grade |
+--------+------+-----------+
| CSC101 | 2021 | 98 |
| POL101 | 2021 | 92 |
| CSC101 | 2022 | 92 |
| EEE101 | 2022 | 75 |
| ENG101 | 2022 | 95 |
+--------+------+-----------+
CourseId
within Year
). Hence, you calculate the average grade and group by CSC101
for the year 2021
separately from the Average Grade for CSC101
for the year 2022
. The course CSC101
for Year 2022
is an aggregation of two rows, while all of the other Group By rows are an aggregation of one row. Additionally, from the concept of Ordering (Order By
clause) you can display ordered results (sorted) by Course
within a given Year.Example 3:
From the SQL query in the previous example, you can restrict the number of rows that you operate by adding a WHERE
clause to the query. For example, to generate the average grade received by students only for CourseId
CSC101
, group by CourseId
within YearTaken
. The following SQL code can accomplish this:
SELECT CourseId AS 'Course', YearTaken AS 'Year',
AVG(NumericGrade) AS 'Avg Grade'
FROM CourseTaken
WHERE CourseId = 'CSC101'
GROUP BY CourseId, YearTaken
ORDER BY CourseId, YearTaken
In the above SQL code, you are adding a condition (via the WHERE
clause) before the actual group aggregation is performed (via the GROUP BY
clause).
The following output is returned:
+--------+------+-----------+
| Course | Year | Avg Grade |
+--------+------+-----------+
| CSC101 | 2021 | 98 |
| CSC101 | 2022 | 92 |
+--------+------+-----------+
Example 4:
From the SQL query in Example 2, you can apply a condition before the final result is returned. To accomplish this use the SQL Having
clause. You can determine the average grade across every CourseId
, where the aggregated average grade is greater than 90
. You can again group by CourseId
within YearTaken
. The following SQL code can accomplish this:
SELECT CourseId AS ‘Course’, YearTaken AS ‘Year’,
AVG(NumericGrade) AS ‘Avg Grade’
FROM CourseTaken
GROUP BY CourseId, YearTaken
HAVING AVG(NumericGrade) > 90
ORDER BY CourseId, YearTaken
The output is the following:
+--------+------+-----------+
| Course | Year | Avg Grade |
+--------+------+-----------+
| CSC101 | 2021 | 98 |
| POL101 | 2021 | 92 |
| CSC101 | 2022 | 92 |
| ENG101 | 2022 | 95 |
+--------+------+-----------+
The row for CourseId
EEE101
was not returned. This is because the Having
clause filtered it out after the GROUP BY
clause was executed (CourseId
EEE101
’s average grade is below 90).
Example 5:
Building upon the SQL code from Example 3 and Example 4, you can create aggregation queries that utilize both the Where
and Having
clause. For example, you can determine the courses that were taken in 2021
, where the average grade for those courses taken was greater than 93
. Here, the Where
clause filters out results before the Group By
data aggregation is performed, and the Having
clause filters out results returned after the Group By
data aggregation is performed. The following SQL code can accomplish this:
SELECT CourseId AS ‘Course’, YearTaken AS ‘Year’,
AVG(NumericGrade) AS ‘Avg Grade’
FROM CourseTaken
WHERE YearTaken = 2021
GROUP BY CourseId, YearTaken
HAVING AVG(NumericGrade) > 93
ORDER BY CourseId
The output returned is the following:
+--------+------+-----------+
| Course | Year | Avg Grade |
+--------+------+-----------+
| CSC101 | 2021 | 98 |
+--------+------+-----------+
Example 6:
You can count the number of rows associated with each Group By
aggregation in a query. Building upon the previous example SQL code, you can generate the average grade received by Students
for only CourseId
CSC101
, grouped by CourseId
within YearTaken
. The code should provide the number of students (count) associated with each group. The following SQL code can accomplish this:
SELECT CourseId AS ‘Course’, YearTaken AS ‘Year’,
AVG(NumericGrade) AS ‘Avg Grade’,
Count(SSNumber) AS ‘Count’
FROM CourseTaken
WHERE CourseId = ‘CSC101’
GROUP BY CourseId, YearTaken
ORDER BY CourseId, YearTaken
The Count(SSNumber)
in the SELECT
clause could have been specified as Count(*)
. The difference between the two syntaxes is that Count(*)
includes rows that have NULL
values in them as well. As per the CourseTaken
table definition above, all columns in the CourseTaken
table must contain non-null values (the NOT NULL
attribute assures this). The Count(SSNumber)
and Count(*)
would be functionally equivalent in this example.
The following output is returned:
+--------+------+-----------+-------+
| Course | Year | Avg Grade | Count |
+--------+------+-----------+-------+
| CSC101 | 2021 | 98 | 1 |
| CSC101 | 2022 | 92 | 2 |
+--------+------+-----------+-------+
Conclusion
This guide provides the building blocks for SQL’s powerful data aggregation operations for grouping and totaling. As noted, you can restrict values that become part of these groups by using a Where
clause in queries before the aggregation is performed. You can filter out rows of grouped results (after the aggregation is performed) by using the Having
clause in the SQL queries.
To learn more about SQL, see our guides on SQL data types, joins, and SQL user management security.
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