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Learn SQL Database Programming

You're reading from  Learn SQL Database Programming

Product type Book
Published in May 2020
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781838984762
Pages 564 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Languages
Author (1):
Josephine Bush Josephine Bush
Profile icon Josephine Bush
Toc

Table of Contents (24) Chapters close

Preface 1. Section 1: Database Fundamentals
2. Introduction to Relational Database Management Systems 3. Installing and Using MySQL Workbench 4. Understanding Data Types 5. Designing and Creating a Database 6. Importing and Exporting Data 7. Section 2: Basic SQL Querying
8. Querying a Single Table 9. Querying Multiple Tables 10. Modifying Data and Table Structures 11. Section 3: Advanced SQL Querying
12. Working with Expressions 13. Grouping and Summarizing Data 14. Advanced Querying Techniques 15. Programmable Objects 16. Section 4: Presenting Your Findings
17. Exploring and Processing Your Data 18. Telling a Story with Your Data 19. Section 5: SQL Best Practices
20. Best Practices for Designing and Querying 21. SQL Appendix 22. Assessments 23. Other Books You May Enjoy

Using the GROUP BY clause

The GROUP BY clause allows you to group rows that have the same values into summary rows. This clause is often used with aggregate functions, which were covered in the previous section of this chapter. It's an optional clause that can be used on a SELECT statement.

The following code shows the GROUP BY syntax, where the WHERE and ORDER BY clauses are optional:

SELECT column(s) 
FROM table
WHERE condition(s)
GROUP BY columns(s)
ORDER BY column(s);

Understanding how GROUP BY works without aggregate functions

Let's say you want to find the distinct list of player ID's and the teams they've played for. You can execute a query like the following:

USE lahmansbaseballdb;
SELECT playerid...
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