Was this helpful?
Aggregate Functions
Aggregate functions return a single value, calculated from values in a column. They take a set of values as their argument. Aggregate functions are also called set functions.
Basic Aggregate Functions
A basic aggregate function returns a single value by aggregating mulitple rows of data.
The syntax of a basic aggregate function is as follows:
function_name ([DISTINCT | ALL] expr)
where:
function_name denotes an aggregate function.
expr denotes any expression that does not include an aggregate function reference (at any level of nesting).
DISTINCT eliminates duplicate values of expr within a set of input rows to the aggregation. ALL (the default) retains duplicate values of expr.
Null values of expr are ignored by the aggregate functions, with the exception of COUNT(*).
The following example uses the SUM aggregate function to calculate the total of salaries for employees in department 23:
SELECT SUM (employee.salary)
       FROM employee
       WHERE employee.dept = 23;
Note:  Aggregate functions used in OpenROAD can only be coded inside SQL statements.
ANY
ANY
Result type: INTEGER4
Returns 1 if any row in the table fulfills the where clause, or 0 if no rows fulfill the WHERE clause.
AVG
AVG
Result type: FLOAT, MONEY, DATE (INTERVAL only)
Returns the average (sum / count). The sum of the values must be within the range of the result data type.
COUNT
COUNT
Result type: INTEGER4
Returns count of non-null occurrences.
COUNT(*)
COUNT(*)
Returns count of the number of rows in a result table, including rows that contain nulls.
For example, the following statement counts the number of employees in department 23:
SELECT COUNT(*)
       FROM employee
       WHERE dept = 23;
The asterisk (*) argument cannot be qualified with ALL or DISTINCT.
Because COUNT(*) counts rows rather than columns, it does not ignore nulls. Consider the following table:
NAME               EXEMPTIONS
Smith              0
Jones              2
Tanghetti          4
Fong               Null
Stevens            Null
Running:
COUNT(exemptions)
returns the value of 3, whereas:
COUNT(*)
returns 5.
If the argument to the COUNT function evaluates to an empty set, COUNT returns zero, which is in contrast to other functions, which return a null.
COUNT_BIG
COUNT_BIG
Result type: INTEGER8
Returns count of non-null occurrences.
For example, count the number of employees allocated to a department:
SELECT COUNT(dept)
       FROM employee;
GROUPING
GROUPING
Result type: INTEGER4
Returns an integer value based on its parameters.
It can be used to simplify a query that needs many GROUP BY levels by letting you more easily express row filtering conditions.
The GROUPING function can have multiple parameters, each of which must be a column or expression in the GROUP BY clause of an aggregate query. The parameters from right to left are represented in the function result by bits from right to left.
When CUBE, ROLLUP, or GROUPING SETS syntax is used, result rows from the query can be formed based on the grouping of rows according to different combinations of the grouping columns or expressions. If a result row is based on a grouping that includes a parameter of the grouping function, its bit position in the GROUPING() function result is 0, otherwise 1. This helps you determine which groupings each of the result rows comes from.
For example:
SELECT sno, pno, SUM(qty), GROUPING(sno, pno) FROM sp
   GROUP BY CUBE(sno, pno)
produces results like:
s1   p1  25   0
s1   p2  30   0
...
s1       100 1
s2        50   1
...
     p1  95   2
     p2  10   2
...
       1000 3
The numbers 0, 1, 2, and 3 are the results of the GROUPING() function. Rows with both sno and pno have a GROUPING() value of 0 because they result from the grouping of both sno and pno. Rows with only sno (superaggregate rows grouped only on sno) have a value of 1 because the rightmost parameter (pno) does not contribute to the grouping. Rows with only pno (superaggregates grouped only on pno) have a value of 2 because the next parameter (sno—in bit position 2) does not contribute. And the last row has a value of 3 because neither sno nor pno are involved in the grouping.
MAX
MAX
Result type: Same as argument
Returns maximum value.
MIN
MIN
Result type: Same as argument
Returns minimum value.
STDDEV_POP
STDDEV_POP
Result type: FLOAT
Computes the population form of the standard deviation (square root of the population variance of the group).
STDDEV_SAMP
STDDEV_SAMP
Result type: FLOAT
Computes the sample form of the standard deviation (square root of the sample variance of the group).
SUM
SUM
Result type: INTEGER4, FLOAT, MONEY, DATE (INTERVAL only)
Returns column total.
VAR_POP
VAR_POP
Result type: FLOAT
Computes the population form of the variance (sum of the squares of the difference of each argument value in the group from the mean of the values, divided by the count of the values).
VAR_SAMP
VAR_SAMP
Result type: FLOAT
Computes the sample form of the variance (sum of the squares of the difference of each argument value in the group from the mean of the values, divided by the count of the values minus 1).
Regression and Correlation Analysis Aggregate Functions
The following aggregate functions perform a variety of regression and correlation analysis.
Syntax is as follows:
function_name(y, x)
where function_name denotes the function name, y is the dependent variable, and x is the independent variable.
Functions for regression and correlation analysis are as follows:
CORR
CORR(y, x)
Result type: FLOAT
Returns the absolute value of the correlation coefficient (ratio of the population covariance divided by the product of the population standard deviation of x and the population standard deviation of y).
For the signed correlation coefficient, use PEARSON_CORR(y, x).
COVAR_POP
COVAR_POP(y, x)
Result type: FLOAT
Returns population covariance (sum of the products of the difference of x from its mean, times the difference of y from its mean, divided by the number of rows).
COVAR_SAMP
COVAR_SAMP(y, x)
Result type: FLOAT
Returns sample covariance (sum of the products of the difference of x from its mean, times the difference of y from its mean, divided by the number of rows minus 1).
PEARSON_CORR
PEARSON_CORR(y, x)
Result type: FLOAT
Returns the correlation coefficient (ratio of the population covariance divided by the product of the population standard deviation of x and the population standard deviation of y).
This is the signed version of CORR(y, x).
REGR_AVGX
REGR_AVGX(y, x)
Result type: FLOAT
Returns average of x’s.
REGR_AVGY
REGR_AVGY(y, x)
Result type: FLOAT
Returns average of y’s.
REGR_COUNT
REGR_COUNT(y, x)
Result type: INTEGER4
Returns count of rows with non-null values for both y and x.
REGR_INTERCEPT
REGR_INTERCEPT(y, x)
Result type: FLOAT
Returns Y-intercept of the least-squares-fit linear equation determined by the (y, x) pairs.
REGR_R2
REGR_R2(y, x)
Result type: FLOAT
Returns square of the correlation coefficient.
REGR_SLOPE
REGR_SLOPE(y, x)
Result type: FLOAT
Returns slope of the least-squares-fit linear equation determined by the (y, x) pairs.
REGR_SXX
REGR_SXX(y, x)
Result type: FLOAT
Returns the sample corrected sum of the squares of x.
REGR_SXY
REGR_SXY(y, x)
Result type: FLOAT
Returns sum of the product of y and x.
REGR_SYY
REGR_SYY(y, x)
Result type: FLOAT
Returns the sample corrected sum of the squares of y.
String Aggregate Functions
String aggregate functions concatenate a set of string values.
LISTAGG
LISTAGG ([DISTINCT] value_expr [, 'delimiter'])
    [WITHIN GROUP (order-by-clause)]
Concatenates expressions within a group.
Result type: VARCHAR(4000). Longer strings are truncated.
where:
DISTINCT
Eliminates duplicate values.
value_expr
Specifies an expression that can appear in the select list of a query. Can contain constants, row values, operators, scalar functions, and scalar subqueries. Null values in the value_expr column are ignored. The value is cast to char data type before being concatenated.
'delimiter'
Defines the separator between concatenated items. The default separator is the empty string.
WITHIN GROUP (order-by-clause)
Specifies how the items in the result should be sorted.
The following LISTAGG examples are based on this table:
DEPT             EMPNO FIRSTNAME  LASTNAME
----------- ---------- ---------- ----------
Marketing          101 Douglas    Cray
Marketing          103 Dong       Luang
Marketing          105 Dennis     Indolay
Admin              107 Sherry     Keller
Admin              109 Carl       Nader
Admin              111 Ruth       Turret
Sales              113 Andrew     Bonnet
Sales              115 Oscar      Hender
Sales              117 Justin     Braushere 
Sales              119            Smith
Concatenate the names of all employees, ordered by last name (LISTAGG used as a simple aggregate):
SELECT LISTAGG(lastname)
    WITHIN GROUP (ORDER BY lastname) AS PERSONNEL
    FROM employee;
PERSONNEL
-----------------------------------------------------------
BonnetBraushereCrayHenderIndolayKellerLuangNaderSmithTurret
Same as previous query, but use a delimiter to separate names with a comma:
SELECT LISTAGG(lastname, ',')
    WITHIN GROUP (ORDER BY lastname) AS PERSONNEL
    FROM employee;
PERSONNEL
--------------------------------------------------------------------
Bonnet,Braushere,Cray,Hender,Indolay,Keller,Luang,Nader,Smith,Turret
Concatenate employees in each department, ordered by last name (LISTAGG used as a regular aggregate with GROUP BY):
SELECT dept, LISTAGG(lastname, ',')
    WITHIN GROUP (ORDER BY lastname) AS PERSONNEL
    FROM employee GROUP BY dept;
DEPT        PERSONNEL
----------- ------------------------------
Admin       Keller,Nader,Turret
Marketing   Cray,Indolay,Luang
Sales       Bonnet,Braushere,Hender,Smith
 
Concatenate employee names in the same department, ordered by last name, partitioned by department (LISTAGG used as a windowing aggregate):
SELECT dept, firstname, lastname, LISTAGG(lastname, ',')
    WITHIN GROUP(ORDER BY lastname)
    OVER (PARTITION BY dept) AS PERSONNEL
    FROM employee ORDER BY dept, lastname, firstname;
DEPT        FIRSTNAME  LASTNAME   PERSONNEL IN SAME DEPT
----------- ---------- ---------- ------------------------------
Admin       Sherry     Keller     Keller,Nader,Turret
Admin       Carl       Nader      Keller,Nader,Turret
Admin       Ruth       Turret     Keller,Nader,Turret
Marketing   Douglas    Cray       Cray,Indolay,Luang
Marketing   Dennis     Indolay    Cray,Indolay,Luang
Marketing   Dong       Luang      Cray,Indolay,Luang
Sales       Andrew     Bonnet     Bonnet,Braushere,Hender,Smith
Sales       Justin     Braushere  Bonnet,Braushere,Hender,Smith
Sales       Oscar      Hender     Bonnet,Braushere,Hender,Smith
Sales                  Smith      Bonnet,Braushere,Hender,Smith
Aggregate Functions and Decimal Data
Given decimal arguments, aggregate functions (with the exception of COUNT) return decimal results.
The following table explains how to determine the scale and precision of results returned for aggregates with decimal arguments:
Function Name
Precision of Result
Scale of Result
COUNT
Not applicable
Not applicable
SUM
39
Same as argument
AVG
39
Scale of argument + 1 (to a maximum of 39)
MAX
Same as argument
Same as argument
MIN
Same as argument
Same as argument
GROUP BY Clause with Aggregate Functions
The GROUP BY clause allows aggregate functions to be performed on subsets of the rows in the table. The subsets are defined by the GROUP BY clause.
For example, the following statement selects rows from a table of political candidates, groups the rows by party, and returns the name of each party and the average funding for the candidates in that party.
SELECT party, AVG(funding)
       FROM candidates
       GROUP BY party;
Restrictions on the Use of Aggregate Functions
The following restrictions apply to the use of aggregate functions:
Aggregate functions cannot be nested.
Aggregate functions can be used only in SELECT or HAVING clauses.
If a SELECT or HAVING clause contains an aggregate function, columns not specified in the aggregate must be specified in the GROUP BY clause. For example:
SELECT dept, AVG(emp_age)
FROM employee
GROUP BY dept;
The above SELECT statement specifies two columns, dept and emp_age, but only emp_age is referenced by the aggregate function, AVG. The dept column must be specified in the GROUP BY clause.
Last modified date: 08/28/2024