Reputation: 158081
I have a table with two columns that might be null
(as well as some other columns). I would like to count how many rows that have column a, b, both and neither columns set to null.
Is this possible with Oracle in one query? Or would I have to create one query for each? Can't use group by
or some other stuff I might not know about for example?
Upvotes: 31
Views: 84695
Reputation: 11
SQL>CREATE TABLE SAMPLE_TAB (COL1 NUMBER NOT NULL, COL2 DATE DEFAULT SYSDATE, COL3 VARCHAR2(20));
SQL>INSERT INTO SAMPLE_TAB(COL1,COL2,COL3) VALUES(121,SYSDATE-2,'SAMPLE DATA');
SQL>INSERT INTO SAMPLE_TAB(COL1,COL2,COL3) VALUES(122,NULL,NULL); --ASSIGN NULL TO COL2
SQL>INSERT INTO SAMPLE_TAB(COL1,COL3) VALUES(123,'SAMPLE DATA RECORD 3');--COL2 DEFAULT VALUE ASSIGN AS SYSDDATE AS PER STRUCTURE.
SQL>COMMIT;
SQL> SELECT * FROM SAMPLE_TAB;
SQL> SELECT *
FROM USER_TAB_COLUMNS U
WHERE 1=1
AND TABLE_NAME='SAMPLE_TAB'
AND NUM_NULLS!=0;
SQL> ANALYZE TABLE SAMPLE_TAB COMPUTE STATISTICS;
SQL> SELECT *
FROM USER_TAB_COLUMNS U
WHERE 1=1
AND TABLE_NAME='SAMPLE_TAB'
AND NUM_NULLS!=0;
Upvotes: 1
Reputation: 1942
It can be accomplished in Oracle just in 1 row:
SELECT COUNT(NVL(potential_null_column, 0)) FROM table;
Function NVL checks if first argument is null and treats it as value from second argument.
Upvotes: 3
Reputation: 239
This worked well for me for counting getting the total count for blank cells on a group of columns in a table in oracle: I added the trim to count empty spaces as null
SELECT (sum(case
when trim(a) is null Then 1
else 0
end)) +
(sum(case
when trim(b) is null
else 0
end)) +
(sum(case
when trim(c) is null
else 0
end)) as NullCount
FROM your_table
Hope this helps
Cheers.
Upvotes: 1
Reputation: 1993
One way to do it would be:
select count(*) from table group by nvl2(a, 0, 1), nvl2(b, 0, 1) having nvl2(a,0,1) = nvl2(b,0,1);
Upvotes: 0
Reputation: 15473
select sum(decode(a,null,0,1)) as "NotNullCount", sum(decode(a,null,1,0)) as "NullCount"
from myTable;
Repeat for as many fields as you like.
Upvotes: 9
Reputation: 67722
COUNT(expr)
will count the number of rows where expr
is not null, thus you can count the number of nulls with expressions like these:
SELECT count(a) nb_a_not_null,
count(b) nb_b_not_null,
count(*) - count(a) nb_a_null,
count(*) - count(b) nb_b_null,
count(case when a is not null and b is not null then 1 end)nb_a_b_not_null
count(case when a is null and b is null then 1 end) nb_a_and_b_null
FROM my_table
Upvotes: 60
Reputation:
Something like this:
SELECT sum(case when a is null and b is null then 1 else 0 end) as both_null_count, sum(case when a is null and b is not null then 1 else 0 end) as only_a_is_null_count FROM your_table
You can extend that for other combinations of null/not null
Upvotes: 10