Reputation: 5349
I have database called schoolDB and 2 database tables,
student
and education
Create student table:
USE [schoolDB]
GO
/****** Object: Table [dbo].[tblStudent] Script Date: 09/22/2013 17:30:11 ******/
SET ANSI_NULLS ON
GO
SET QUOTED_IDENTIFIER ON
GO
SET ANSI_PADDING ON
GO
CREATE TABLE [dbo].[tblStudent](
[STUDENTNUMBER] [varchar](50) NOT NULL,
[STUDENTNAME] [varchar](50) NULL,
[EDUCATIONID] [varchar](50) NULL,
CONSTRAINT [PK_tblStudent] PRIMARY KEY CLUSTERED
(
[STUDENTNUMBER] ASC
)WITH (PAD_INDEX = OFF, STATISTICS_NORECOMPUTE = OFF, IGNORE_DUP_KEY = OFF, ALLOW_ROW_LOCKS = ON, ALLOW_PAGE_LOCKS = ON) ON [PRIMARY]
) ON [PRIMARY]
GO
SET ANSI_PADDING OFF
GO
Create Education table:
USE [schoolDB]
GO
/****** Object: Table [dbo].[tblEducation] Script Date: 09/22/2013 17:31:30 ******/
SET ANSI_NULLS ON
GO
SET QUOTED_IDENTIFIER ON
GO
SET ANSI_PADDING ON
GO
CREATE TABLE [dbo].[tblEducation](
[EDUCATIONID] [varchar](50) NOT NULL,
[STUDENTNUMBER] [varchar](50) NULL,
[INSTITUTIONNAME] [varchar](50) NULL,
[COURSENAME] [varchar](50) NULL,
[GRADE] [varchar](50) NULL,
[YEAROFLEAVING] [varchar](50) NULL
) ON [PRIMARY]
GO
SET ANSI_PADDING OFF
GO
Here is a screenshot of the data:
I want to be able to find every one who has been to an institution name called Secondary School
AND who has another education record with a course name like
biol
. Not just limited to biology, i want to find all the sciences, so i need to put multiple like statements.
I have tried this:
SELECT COUNT(*) AS 'Our Students',
DTOurStudents.STUDENTNAME
FROM (SELECT TOP 2 TBLSTUDENT.STUDENTNUMBER,
TBLSTUDENT.STUDENTNAME,
TBLEDUCATION.INSTITUTIONNAME,
TBLEDUCATION.COURSENAME
FROM TBLEDUCATION
INNER JOIN TBLSTUDENT
ON TBLEDUCATION.STUDENTNUMBER = TBLSTUDENT.STUDENTNUMBER
WHERE TBLEDUCATION.INSTITUTIONNAME LIKE '%Secondary School%')
DTOurStudents
GROUP BY DTOurStudents.STUDENTNAME
SQL FIDDLE: http://sqlfiddle.com/#!3/666f8/2
Upvotes: 4
Views: 765
Reputation: 4591
A simple answer.
ORDER BY
to make sure secondary school shows up first.What your question left unclear is what should happen when there are more than 2 rows. In this case they all show up, but the query is easy enough to adjust (add a row_number and filter on rn <= 2).
Fiddle: http://sqlfiddle.com/#!3/666f8/89/0
WITH cte as (
SELECT
STUDENTNUMBER,
COURSENAME,
INSTITUTIONNAME,
COUNT(*) OVER (PARTITION BY STUDENTNUMBER) AS RecordCount
FROM tblEducation
WHERE INSTITUTIONNAME = 'Secondary School'
OR COURSENAME like 'biol%'
OR COURSENAME like 'math%'
OR COURSENAME like 'etc%'
)
select *
from cte
where RecordCount >= 2
order by
studentnumber,
case when institutionname = 'Secondary School' then 1 else 2 end
EDIT
A comment correctly points out that the query doesn't check that there is at least one secondary school and one other education. There could be two secondary schools, or no secondary school at all!
Those cases can be handled with the slightly more complicated query below:
WITH cte as (
SELECT
STUDENTNUMBER,
COURSENAME,
INSTITUTIONNAME,
SUM(CASE INSTITUTIONNAME WHEN 'Secondary School' THEN 1 END)
OVER (PARTITION BY STUDENTNUMBER) AS SecondarySchoolCount,
SUM(CASE WHEN INSTITUTIONNAME <> 'Secondary School'
AND COURSENAME LIKE 'biol%'
THEN 1 END)
OVER (PARTITION BY STUDENTNUMBER) AS CourseCount
FROM tblEducation
WHERE INSTITUTIONNAME = 'Secondary School'
OR COURSENAME like 'biol%'
OR COURSENAME like 'math%'
OR COURSENAME like 'etc%'
)
select *
from cte
where SecondarySchoolCount >= 1 AND CourseCount >= 1
order by
studentnumber,
case when institutionname = 'Secondary School' then 1 else 2 end
Upvotes: 2
Reputation: 16904
The following example uses the EXISTS operator on a correlated subquery, that has a joining two queries
SELECT *
FROM dbo.tblEducation t
WHERE EXISTS (SELECT 1
FROM (SELECT e.STUDENTNUMBER
FROM dbo.tblEducation e
WHERE e.INSTITUTIONNAME = 'Secondary School'
) x JOIN (SELECT e2.STUDENTNUMBER
FROM dbo.tblEducation e2
WHERE e2.INSTITUTIONNAME != 'Secondary School'
) x2 ON x.STUDENTNUMBER = x2.STUDENTNUMBER
WHERE x.STUDENTNUMBER = t.STUDENTNUMBER
)
See demo on SQLFiddle
Or
SELECT *
FROM tblEducation t3
WHERE EXISTS(SELECT t.STUDENTNUMBER
FROM tblEducation t
WHERE t.INSTITUTIONNAME LIKE 'Secondary School'
AND EXISTS(SELECT 1
FROM tblEducation t2
WHERE t.STUDENTNUMBER = t2.STUDENTNUMBER
AND t2.INSTITUTIONNAME != t.INSTITUTIONNAME
)
AND t3.STUDENTNUMBER = t.STUDENTNUMBER
)
Upvotes: 1
Reputation: 117380
If you want both rows to show up, you can use this query:
select a.*
from tblEducation as a
where
exists (
select *
from tblEducation as t
where t.INSTITUTIONNAME = 'Secondary School' and t.STUDENTNUMBER = a.STUDENTNUMBER
) and
exists (
select *
from tblEducation as t
where t.INSTITUTIONNAME <> 'Secondary School' and t.STUDENTNUMBER = a.STUDENTNUMBER
)
or you can do it like this:
with cte as (
select
a.STUDENTNUMBER
from tblEducation as a
group by
a.STUDENTNUMBER,
case when a.INSTITUTIONNAME = 'Secondary School' then 1 else 0 end
)
select a.*
from tblEducation as a
where
a.STUDENTNUMBER in (
select t.STUDENTNUMBER
from cte as t group by t.STUDENTNUMBER
having count(*) > 1
)
Actually both of these queries diplay all rows for STUDENTNUMBER if there exists at least one row with INSTITUTIONNAME = 'Secondary School'
and at least one row with INSTITUTIONNAME <> 'Secondary School'
Upvotes: 1
Reputation: 1381
SELECT DISTINCT s.STUDENTNUMBER
FROM tblStudent s
INNER JOIN tblEducation e
ON (s.studentnumber = e.studentnumber and (
e.institutionname = 'Secondary School'
or e.coursename like '%biol%'
OR e.coursename like '%math%'
))
Should work?
Upvotes: 1
Reputation: 1449
Try this
WITH CTE AS
(
SELECT E.STUDENTNUMBER
FROM (SELECT * FROM TBLEDUCATION WHERE INSTITUTIONNAME LIKE '%Secondary School%') E
INNER JOIN (SELECT * FROM TBLEDUCATION WHERE INSTITUTIONNAME NOT LIKE '%Secondary School%' AND COURSENAME LIKE '%biol%') E1
ON E.STUDENTNUMBER=E1.STUDENTNUMBER
)
SELECT *
FROM TBLSTUDENT S
INNER JOIN TBLEDUCATION E
ON S.STUDENTNUMBER = E.STUDENTNUMBER
WHERE S.STUDENTNUMBER IN (SELECT STUDENTNUMBER FROM CTE)
Upvotes: 1
Reputation: 974
This will give you a list of students and a count of college courses (per college), by joining the institution table with itself.
SELECT
STUDENTNUMBER,
SCHOOL_NAME,
COLLEGE_NAME,
count(*) as COLLEGE_COURSES
FROM (
SELECT
school.STUDENTNUMBER,
school.INSTITUTIONNAME AS SCHOOL_NAME,
college.INSTITUTIONNAME AS COLLEGE_NAME
FROM dbo.tblEducation as school
INNER JOIN dbo.tblEducation as college ON school.STUDENTNUMBER = college.STUDENTNUMBER
WHERE school.INSTITUTIONNAME = 'Secondary School'
AND college.INSTITUTIONNAME <> 'Secondary School'
AND (college.COURSENAME like 'biol%'
OR college.COURSENAME like 'math%'
OR college.COURSENAME like 'etc%')
) AS c
GROUP BY STUDENTNUMBER, SCHOOL_NAME, COLLEGE_NAME
If you want the college coursename then you can return that in the inner query. But since there is only one record per college course, the outer select
and the group by
would be redundant.
SELECT
school.STUDENTNUMBER,
school.INSTITUTIONNAME AS SCHOOL_NAME,
college.INSTITUTIONNAME AS COLLEGE_NAME,
college.COURSENAME
FROM dbo.tblEducation as school
INNER JOIN dbo.tblEducation as college ON school.STUDENTNUMBER = college.STUDENTNUMBER
WHERE school.INSTITUTIONNAME = 'Secondary School'
AND college.INSTITUTIONNAME <> 'Secondary School'
AND (college.COURSENAME like 'biol%'
OR college.COURSENAME like 'math%'
OR college.COURSENAME like 'etc%'
Upvotes: 3