I am validating a table which has a transaction level data of an eCommerce site and find the exact errors.
I want your help to find duplicate records in a 50 column table on SQL Server.
Suppose my data is:
OrderNo shoppername amountpayed city Item
1 Sam 10 A Iphone
1 Sam 10 A Iphone--->>Duplication to be detected
1 Sam 5 A Ipod
2 John 20 B Macbook
3 John 25 B Macbookair
4 Jack 5 A Ipod
Suppose I use the below query:
Select shoppername,count(*) as cnt
from dbo.sales
having count(*) > 1
group by shoppername
will return me
Sam 2
John 2
But I don't want to find duplicate just over 1 or 2 columns. I want to find the duplicate over all the columns together in my data. I want the result as:
1 Sam 10 A Iphone
with x as (select *,rn = row_number()
over(PARTITION BY OrderNo,item order by OrderNo)
from #temp1)
select * from x
where rn > 1
you can remove duplicates by replacing select statement by
delete x where rn > 1
SELECT OrderNo, shoppername, amountPayed, city, item, count(*) as cnt
FROM dbo.sales
GROUP BY OrderNo, shoppername, amountPayed, city, item
HAVING COUNT(*) > 1
SQL> SELECT JOB,COUNT(JOB) FROM EMP GROUP BY JOB;
JOB COUNT(JOB)
--------- ----------
ANALYST 2
CLERK 4
MANAGER 3
PRESIDENT 1
SALESMAN 4
Just add all fields to the query and remember to add them to Group By as well.
Select shoppername, a, b, amountpayed, item, count(*) as cnt
from dbo.sales
group by shoppername, a, b, amountpayed, item
having count(*) > 1
To get the list of multiple records use following command
select field1,field2,field3, count(*)
from table_name
group by field1,field2,field3
having count(*) > 1
Try this instead
SELECT MAX(shoppername), COUNT(*) AS cnt
FROM dbo.sales
GROUP BY CHECKSUM(*)
HAVING COUNT(*) > 1
Read about the CHECKSUM function first, as there can be duplicates.
with x as (
select shoppername,count(shoppername)
from sales
having count(shoppername)>1
group by shoppername)
select t.* from x,win_gp_pin1510 t
where x.shoppername=t.shoppername
order by t.shoppername
First of all, I doubt that the result it not accurate? Seem like there are Three 'Sam' from the original table. But it is not critical to the question.
Then here we come for the question itself. Based on your table, the best way to show duplicate value is to use count(*)
and Group by
clause. The query would look like this
SELECT OrderNo, shoppername, amountPayed, city, item, count(*) as RepeatTimes FROM dbo.sales GROUP BY OrderNo, shoppername, amountPayed, city, item HAVING COUNT(*) > 1
The reason is that all columns together from your table uniquely identified each record, which means the records will be considered as duplicate only when all values from each column are exactly the same, also you want to show all fields for duplicate records, so the group by
will not miss any column, otherwise yes because you can only select
columns that participate in the 'group by' clause.
Now I would like to give you any example for With...Row_Number()Over(...)
, which is using table expression together with Row_Number function.
Suppose you have a nearly same table but with one extra column called Shipping Date, and the value may change even the rest are the same. Here it is:
OrderNo shoppername amountpayed city Item Shipping Date
1 Sam 10 A Iphone 2016-01-01
1 Sam 10 A Iphone 2016-02-02
1 Sam 5 A Ipod 2016-03-03
2 John 20 B Macbook 2016-04-04
3 John 25 B Macbookair 2016-05-05
4 Jack 5 A Ipod 2016-06-06
Notice that row# 2 is not a duplicate one if you still take all columns as a unit. But what if you want to treat them as duplicate as well in this case? You should use With...Row_Number()Over(...)
, and the query would look like this:
WITH TABLEEXPRESSION
AS
(SELECT *,ROW_NUMBER() OVER (PARTITION BY OrderNo, shoppername, amountPayed, city, item ORDER BY [Shipping Date] as Identifier) --if you consider the one with late shipping date as the duplicate
FROM dbo.sales)
SELECT * FROM TABLEEXPRESSION
WHERE Identifier !=1 --or use '>1'
The above query will give result together with Shipping Date, for example:
OrderNo shoppername amountpayed city Item Shipping Date Identifier
1 Sam 10 A Iphone 2016-02-02 2
Note this one is different from the one with 2016-01-01, and the reason why 2016-02-02 has been filtered out is PARTITION BY OrderNo, shoppername, amountPayed, city, item ORDER BY [Shipping Date] as Identifier
, and Shipping Date is NOT one of the column that need to be took care of for duplicate records, which means the one with 2016-02-02 still could be a perfect result for your question.
Now summarize it little bit, using count(*)
and Group by
clause together is the best choice when you only want to show all columns from Group by
clause as the result, otherwise you will miss the columns that do not participate in group by
.
While For With...Row_Number()Over(...)
, it is suitable in every scenario that you want to find duplicate records, however, it is little bit complicated to write the query and little bit over engineered compared to the former one.
If your purpose is to delete duplicate records from table, you have to use the later WITH...ROW_NUMBER()OVER(...)...DELETE FROM...WHERE
one.
Hope this helps!
Try this
with T1 AS
(
SELECT LASTNAME, COUNT(1) AS 'COUNT' FROM Employees GROUP BY LastName HAVING COUNT(1) > 1
)
SELECT E.*,T1.[COUNT] FROM Employees E INNER JOIN T1 ON T1.LastName = E.LastName
You can use below methods to find the output
with Ctec AS
(
select *,Row_number() over(partition by name order by Name)Rnk
from Table_A
)
select Name from ctec
where rnk>1
select name from Table_A
group by name
having count(*)>1
Select *
from dbo.sales
group by shoppername
having(count(Item) > 1)
Select EventID,count() as cnt
from dbo.EventInstances
group by EventID
having count() > 1
The following is running code:
SELECT abnno, COUNT(abnno)
FROM tbl_Name
GROUP BY abnno
HAVING ( COUNT(abnno) > 1 )