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Módulo 2 · Lição 4 de 48/57 no curso~8 min
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Contando e resumindo: COUNT, AVG, MAX

So far every SELECT returned one row for each row of the table. Aggregate functions do the opposite: they read many rows and return a single value that summarises them.

The most common ones are:

  • COUNT(*) — how many rows there are.
  • AVG(column) — the average of numeric values (ignores NULL).
  • MAX(column) / MIN(column) — the maximum / minimum value.
  • SUM(column) — the sum of numeric values.
SQL
SELECT COUNT(*),
       AVG(salary),
       MAX(salary)
FROM employees;

When the aggregate is applied to the whole table (without GROUP BY, which you will see in the next module) the result is a single row, regardless of how many rows the source table has.

Combining with WHERE

WHERE filters before aggregation: the aggregate only works on the rows that passed the filter.

SQL
-- Stipendio medio dei soli dipendenti del Marketing (department_id = 3):
SELECT AVG(salary)
FROM employees
WHERE department_id = 3;

Try it

Exercício#sql.m2.l4.e1
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How many employees have been hired since January 1, 2020? Return a single number (one row, one column).

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The function that counts rows is COUNT(*).

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Review exercise

Exercício#sql.m2.l4.e2
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In a single query, compute the average (AVG) and maximum (MAX) salary of employees in Marketing (department_id = 3). One row, two columns.

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You can put several aggregate functions in the same SELECT, separated by commas.

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