MySQL – GROUP BY Clause
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MySQL GROUP BY Clause
The GROUP BY clause in MySQL is used to arrange identical data in a table into groups.
For example, let us suppose you have a table of sales data of an organization consisting of date, product, and sales amount. To calculate the total sales in a particular year, the GROUP BY clause can be used to group the sales of products made in that year. Similarly, you can group the data by date to calculate the total sales for each day, or by a combination of product and date to calculate the total sales for each product on each day.
This GROUP BY clause follows the WHERE clause in an SQL statement and precedes the ORDER BY or HAVING clause (if they exist). You can use GROUP BY to group values from a column, and, if you wish, perform calculations on that column. You can use COUNT, SUM, AVG, etc., functions on the grouped column.
Syntax
Following is the basic syntax to use GROUP BY with SELECT statement −
SELECT column_name(s) FROM table_name GROUP BY [condition | column_name(s)];
Example
This example demonstrates how to use aggregate functions with GROUP BY clause.
First of all, create a table named CUSTOMERS, using the following CREATE TABLE query −
CREATE TABLE CUSTOMERS ( ID INT NOT NULL, NAME VARCHAR (20) NOT NULL, AGE INT NOT NULL, ADDRESS CHAR (25), SALARY DECIMAL (18, 2), PRIMARY KEY (ID) );
Now, insert the following records into the CUSTOMERS table using the following INSERT statement −
INSERT INTO CUSTOMERS VALUES (1, ''Ramesh'', 32, ''Ahmedabad'', 2000.00), (2, ''Khilan'', 25, ''Delhi'', 1500.00), (3, ''Kaushik'', 23, ''Kota'', 2000.00), (4, ''Chaitali'', 25, ''Mumbai'', 6500.00), (5, ''Hardik'', 27, ''Bhopal'', 8500.00), (6, ''Komal'', 22, ''Hyderabad'', 4500.00), (7, ''Muffy'', 24, ''Indore'', 10000.00);
The table is created as follows −
ID | NAME | AGE | ADDRESS | SALARY |
---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Ramesh | 32 | Ahmedabad | 2000.00 |
2 | Khilan | 25 | Delhi | 1500.00 |
3 | Kaushik | 23 | Kota | 2000.00 |
4 | Chaitali | 25 | Mumbai | 6500.00 |
5 | Hardik | 27 | Bhopal | 8500.00 |
6 | Komal | 22 | Hyderabad | 4500.00 |
7 | Muffy | 24 | Indore | 10000.00 |
Now, use the following GROUP BY query to group the customers based on their age −
SELECT AGE, COUNT(Name) FROM CUSTOMERS GROUP BY AGE;
Output
Following is the result produced −
AGE | COUNT(Name) |
---|---|
32 | 1 |
25 | 2 |
23 | 1 |
27 | 1 |
22 | 1 |
24 | 1 |
MySQL GROUP BY on Single Column
When we use the GROUP BY clause on a single column, all common values in that column will be added together making it a single record.
Example
In this example, let us group the customers by their age and calculate the average salary for each age using the following query −
SELECT AGE, AVG(SALARY) AS AVG_SALARY FROM CUSTOMERS GROUP BY AGE;
Output
This would produce the following result −
AGE | AVG_SALARY |
---|---|
32 | 2000.000000 |
25 | 4000.000000 |
23 | 2000.000000 |
27 | 8500.000000 |
22 | 4500.000000 |
24 | 10000.000000 |
MySQL GROUP BY on Multiple Columns
When we use the GROUP BY clause with multiple columns, the common record obtained by combining values from these columns will be grouped together into a single record.
Example
In this example, if you want to know the total amount of salary for each customer age wise, then the GROUP BY query would be as follows −
SELECT CONCAT(AGE, '' - '', SALARY) AS SALARY_AGEWISE FROM CUSTOMERS GROUP BY AGE, SALARY;
Output
This would produce the following result −
SALARY_AGEWISE |
---|
32 – 2000.00 |
25 – 1500.00 |
23 – 2000.00 |
25 – 6500.00 |
27 – 8500.00 |
22 – 4500.00 |
24 – 10000.00 |
MySQL GROUP BY with ORDER BY Clause
We can use the ORDER BY clause with GROUP BY in MySQL to sort the result set by one or more columns.
Syntax
Following is the syntax for using ORDER BY clause with GROUP BY clause in SQL −
SELECT column1, column2, ..., aggregate_function(columnX) AS alias FROM table GROUP BY column1, column2, ... ORDER BY column1 [ASC | DESC], column2 [ASC | DESC], ...;
Example
In here, we are trying to find the highest salary for each age, sorted by high to low −
SELECT AGE, MAX(salary) AS MAX_SALARY FROM CUSTOMERS GROUP BY AGE ORDER BY MAX(salary) DESC;
Output
This would produce the following result −
AGE | AVG_SALARY |
---|---|
24 | 10000.00 |
27 | 8500.00 |
25 | 6500.00 |
22 | 4500.00 |
32 | 2000.00 |
23 | 2000.00 |
MySQL GROUP BY with HAVING Clause
We can also use the GROUP BY clause with the HAVING clause to filter the results of a query based on conditions applied to groups of data. The condition can be applied to an aggregate function that is used in the SELECT statement or to a column in the GROUP BY clause.
Syntax
Following is the syntax for using ORDER BY clause with HAVING clause in SQL −
SELECT column1, column2, aggregate_function(column) FROM table_name GROUP BY column1, column2 HAVING condition;
Example
In the following query, we are grouping the customers by their age and calculating the average salary for each group. The HAVING clause is used to filter the results to show only those groups where the average salary is greater than 8000 −
SELECT AGE, AVG(SALARY) AS AVG_SALARY FROM CUSTOMERS GROUP BY AGE HAVING AVG(salary) > 8000;
Output
This would produce the following result −
AGE | AVG_SALARY |
---|---|
27 | 8500.000000 |
24 | 10000.000000 |
GROUP BY Clause Using Client Program
In addition to using GROUP BY Clause in MySQL server with an SQL query, we can also execute the GROUP BY clause using a client program.
Syntax
Following are the syntaxes of the Group by Clause in select statement in various programming languages −
To use GROUP BY Clause in MySQL table through PHP program, we need to execute the SQL statement using the function named query() provided by mysqli connector −
$sql = "SELECT EXPRESSION1, EXPRESSION2, ... EXPRESSION_N, AGGREGATE_FUNCTION(EXPRESSION) FROM TABLE_NAME [WHERE CONDITION] GROUP BY EXPRESSION1, EXPRESSION2.."; $mysqli->query($sql,$resultmode)
To use GROUP BY Clause in MySQL table through JavaScript program, we need to execute the SQL statement using the function named query() provided by mysql2 connector −
sql= " SELECT column_name(s) FROM table_name GROUP BY [condition | column_name(s)];" Con.query(sql);
To use GROUP BY Clause in MySQL table through Java program, we need to execute the SQL statement using the function named executeQuery() provided by JDBC type 4 driver −
String sql = "SELECT column_name(s) FROM table_name GROUP BY [condition | column_name(s)]"; statement.executeQuery(sql);
To use GROUP BY Clause in MySQL table through Java program, we need to execute the SQL statement using the function named execute() provided by MySQL Connector/Python −
group_by_clause_query = "SELECT column_name(s) aggregate_function(column) FROM table_name GROUP BY column_name(s)" cursorObj.execute(group_by_clause_query)
Example
Following are the implementations of GROUP BY using various programming languages −
$dbhost = ''localhost''; $dbuser = ''root''; $dbpass = ''password''; $dbname = ''TUTORIALS''; $mysqli = new mysqli($dbhost, $dbuser, $dbpass, $dbname); if($mysqli->connect_errno ) { printf("Connect failed: %s
", $mysqli->connect_error); exit(); } //printf(''Connected successfully.
''); $sql = ''SELECT tutorial_title, count(tutorial_id) AS tot_count FROM tutorials_tbl WHERE tutorial_id > 2 GROUP BY tutorial_title''; $result = $mysqli->query($sql); if ($result->num_rows > 0) { printf("Table records: n"); while($row = $result->fetch_assoc()) { printf("Title: %s, Count: %d", $row["tutorial_title"], $row["tot_count"]); printf("n"); } } else { printf(''No record found.
''); } mysqli_free_result($result); $mysqli->close();
Output
The output obtained is as follows −
Table records: Title: JAVA Tutorial, Count: 1 Title: Learn PHP, Count: 1 Title: Learn MySQL, Count: 2
var mysql = require(''mysql2''); var con = mysql.createConnection({ host: "localhost", user: "root", password: "Nr5a0204@123" }); //Connecting to MySQL con.connect(function (err) { if (err) throw err; console.log("Connected!"); console.log("--------------------------"); //Creating a Database sql = "create database TUTORIALS" con.query(sql); //Select database sql = "USE TUTORIALS" con.query(sql); //Creating table sql = "CREATE TABLE IF NOT EXISTS employee_tbl(id INT NOT NULL, name VARCHAR(100) NOT NULL, work_date DATE, daily_typing_pages INT);" con.query(sql); //Inserting Records sql = "INSERT INTO employee_tbl(id, name, work_date, daily_typing_pages) VALUES(1, ''John'', ''2007-01-24'', 250), (2, ''Ram'', ''2007-05-27'', 220), (3, ''Jack'', ''2007-05-06'', 170), (3, ''Jack'', ''2007-04-06'', 100), (4, ''Jill'', ''2007-04-06'', 220),(5, ''Zara'', ''2007-06-06'', 300),(5, ''Zara'', ''2007-02-06'', 350);" con.query(sql); //Using GROUP BY Clause sql = "SELECT name, COUNT(*) FROM employee_tbl GROUP BY name;" con.query(sql, function(err, result){ if (err) throw err console.log(result) }); });
Output
The output produced is as follows −
Connected! -------------------------- [ { name: ''John'', ''COUNT(*)'': 1 }, { name: ''Ram'', ''COUNT(*)'': 1 }, { name: ''Jack'', ''COUNT(*)'': 2 }, { name: ''Jill'', ''COUNT(*)'': 1 }, { name: ''Zara'', ''COUNT(*)'': 2 } ]
import java.sql.Connection; import java.sql.DriverManager; import java.sql.ResultSet; import java.sql.Statement; public class GroupByClause { public static void main(String[] args) { String url = "jdbc:mysql://localhost:3306/TUTORIALS"; String user = "root"; String password = "password"; ResultSet rs; try { Class.forName("com.mysql.cj.jdbc.Driver"); Connection con = DriverManager.getConnection(url, user, password); Statement st = con.createStatement(); //System.out.println("Database connected successfully...!"); String sql = "SELECT AGE, AVG(SALARY) as avg_salary FROM CUSTOMERS GROUP BY age"; rs = st.executeQuery(sql); System.out.println("Table records(gruop by age): "); while(rs.next()){ String age = rs.getString("Age"); String avg_salary = rs.getString("avg_salary"); System.out.println("Age: " + age + ", Salary: " + avg_salary); } }catch(Exception e) { e.printStackTrace(); } } }
Output
The output obtained is as shown below −
Table records(gruop by age): Age: 32, Salary: 2000.000000 Age: 25, Salary: 4000.000000 Age: 23, Salary: 2000.000000 Age: 27, Salary: 8500.000000 Age: 22, Salary: 4500.000000 Age: 24, Salary: 10000.000000
import mysql.connector #establishing the connection connection = mysql.connector.connect( host=''localhost'', user=''root'', password=''password'', database=''tut'' ) # Creating a cursor object cursorObj = connection.cursor() group_by_clause_query = """ SELECT ADDRESS, AVG(SALARY) AS average_salary FROM customers GROUP BY ADDRESS """ cursorObj.execute(group_by_clause_query) # Fetching all the grouped rows grouped_rows = cursorObj.fetchall() for row in grouped_rows: address, average_salary = row print(f"Address: {address}, Average Salary: {average_salary}") cursorObj.close() connection.close()
Output
Following is the output of the above code −
Address: Hyderabad, Average Salary: 7500.000000 Address: Kerala, Average Salary: 8000.000000 Address: Mumbai, Average Salary: 1200.000000 Address: Vishakapatnam, Average Salary: 8500.000000 Address: Delhi, Average Salary: 10000.000000
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