SQL statements remove duplicate records, get duplicate records
--Query a table to effectively remove duplicate records, UserID as a self-growing primary key, Roleid as a repeating field
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SELECT MIN (UserID) as UserID, Roleid from Tmptable GROUP by Roleid SELECT Roleid from Tmptable GROUP by Roleid (COUNT (*) > 1) SELECT DISTINCT * from tmptable |
SQL statement query for all table names in SQL Server Access database, field name February 01, 2007 Thursday PM 04:21sql Server
View all table names:
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Select name from sysobjects where type= ' U ' |
Query table for all field names:
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Select name from syscolumns Where id=object_id (' Table name ')
SELECT * FROM Information_schema.tables SELECT * FROM Information_schema.views SELECT * FROM Information_schema.columns |
ACCESS
View all table names:
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Select name from Msysobjects where type=1 and flags=0 |
The msysobjects is a system object, and the default is hidden. Make it visible through tools, options, views, displays, and system objects
Cases
As shown in the following table:
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CREATE TABLE ' T1 ' ( ' UserID ' INT (one) DEFAULT NULL, ' Atime ' datetime DEFAULT NULL, KEY ' Idx_userid ' (' userid ') ) Engine=innodb DEFAULT Charset=utf8; |
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Mysql> SELECT * from T1; +--------+---------------------+ | UserID | Atime | +--------+---------------------+ | 1 | 2013-08-12 11:05:25 | | 2 | 2013-08-12 11:05:29 | | 3 | 2013-08-12 11:05:32 | | 5 | 2013-08-12 11:05:34 | | 1 | 2013-08-12 11:05:40 | | 2 | 2013-08-12 11:05:43 | | 3 | 2013-08-12 11:05:48 | | 5 | 2013-08-12 11:06:03 | +--------+---------------------+ 8 ROWS in SET (0.00 sec) |
The UserID is not unique, requiring that each userid in the table be taken from a recent record in the present time. At first sight this condition is generally thought to borrow temporary tables and add the main build with the help of the join operation.
Give a simple method:
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Mysql> SELECT Userid,substring_index (Group_concat (atime order by Atime DESC), ",", 1) as atime to T1 group by UserID; +--------+---------------------+ | UserID | Atime | +--------+---------------------+ | 1 | 2013-08-12 11:05:40 | | 2 | 2013-08-12 11:05:43 | | 3 | 2013-08-12 11:05:48 | | 5 | 2013-08-12 11:06:03 | +--------+---------------------+ 4 ROWS in SET (0.03 sec) |
Say
There is a field "name" in Table A,
and the "name" value may be the same between different records,
Now you need to query the records in the table, the "name" value duplicates the item;
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Select Name,count (*) from-A Group by Name has Count (*) > 1 |
If the same gender is also the same large as the following:
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Select Name,sex,count (*) from-A Group by Name,sex have Count (*) > 1 |
Three
Method One
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Declare @max integer, @id integer Declare cur_rows cursor Local for select main field, COUNT (*) from table name Group by main field having count (*) >; 1 Open Cur_rows Fetch cur_rows into @id, @max While @ @fetch_status =0 Begin Select @max = @max-1 SET ROWCOUNT @max Delete from table name where main field = @id Fetch cur_rows into @id, @max End Close Cur_rows SET ROWCOUNT 0 |
Method Two
There are two duplicates of the record, one is a completely duplicate record, that is, all the fields are duplicate records, the second is some key fields duplicate records, such as the Name field repeat, and other fields do not necessarily repeat or repeat can be ignored.
1, for the first repetition, easier to solve, the use of
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SELECT DISTINCT * FROM tablename |
You can get a result set without duplicate records.
If the table needs to delete duplicate records (1 of duplicate records are retained), you can delete them in the following ways
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SELECT DISTINCT * into #Tmp tablename DROP TABLE TableName SELECT * INTO TableName from #Tmp drop table #Tmp |
This duplication occurs because the table is poorly designed and can be resolved by adding a unique index column.
2. This type of repetition usually requires the first record in the duplicate record to be retained, as follows
Suppose there is a duplicate field of name,address that requires a unique result set for both fields
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Select Identity (int,1,1) as Autoid, * into #Tmp from TableName Select min (autoid) as autoid into #Tmp2 from #Tmp Group by name,autoid SELECT * from #Tmp where autoid in (select Autoid from #tmp2) |
The last select gets the name,address result set (but one more autoid field, which can be written in the SELECT clause to omit this column)
Four
Query duplication
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Select * From TableName where ID in ( Select ID from tablename Group by ID have count (id) > 1 ) |