The COUNT() function returns the number of rows that matches a specified criteria.
SQL COUNT(column_name) Syntax
The COUNT(column_name) function returns the number of values (NULL values will not be counted) of the specified column: SELECT COUNT(column_name) FROM table_name
SQL COUNT(*) Syntax
The COUNT(*) function returns the number of records in a table: SELECT COUNT(*) FROM table_name
SQL COUNT(DISTINCT column_name) Syntax
The COUNT(DISTINCT column_name) function returns the number of distinct values of the specified column: SELECT COUNT(DISTINCT column_name) FROM table_name
SQL COUNT(column_name) Example
We have the following "Orders" table:O_Id | OrderDate | OrderPrice | Customer |
---|---|---|---|
1 | 2008/11/12 | 1000 | Hansen |
2 | 2008/10/23 | 1600 | Nilsen |
3 | 2008/09/02 | 700 | Hansen |
4 | 2008/09/03 | 300 | Hansen |
5 | 2008/08/30 | 2000 | Jensen |
6 | 2008/10/04 | 100 | Nilsen |
We use the following SQL statement:
SELECT COUNT(Customer) AS CustomerNilsen FROM Orders
WHERE Customer='Nilsen'
WHERE Customer='Nilsen'
CustomerNilsen |
---|
2 |
SQL COUNT(*) Example
If we omit the WHERE clause, like this: SELECT COUNT(*) AS NumberOfOrders FROM Orders
NumberOfOrders |
---|
6 |
SQL COUNT(DISTINCT column_name) Example
Now we want to count the number of unique customers in the "Orders" table.We use the following SQL statement:
SELECT COUNT(DISTINCT Customer) AS NumberOfCustomers FROM Orders
NumberOfCustomers |
---|
3 |
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