If you want to count duplicates among multiple columns, use group by
:
select ColumnA, ColumnB, ColumnC, count(*) as NumDuplicates
from table
group by ColumnA, ColumnB, ColumnC
If you only want the values that are duplicated, then the count is bigger than 1. You get this using the having
clause:
select ColumnA, ColumnB, ColumnC, count(*) as NumDuplicates
from table
group by ColumnA, ColumnB, ColumnC
having NumDuplicates > 1
If you actually want all the duplicate rows returns, then join the last query back to the original data:
select t.*
from table t join
(select ColumnA, ColumnB, ColumnC, count(*) as NumDuplicates
from table
group by ColumnA, ColumnB, ColumnC
having NumDuplicates > 1
) tsum
on t.ColumnA = tsum.ColumnA and t.ColumnB = tsum.ColumnB and t.ColumnC = tsum.ColumnC
This will work, assuming none of the column values are NULL. If so, then try:
on (t.ColumnA = tsum.ColumnA or t.ColumnA is null and tsum.ColumnA is null) and
(t.ColumnB = tsum.ColumnB or t.ColumnB is null and tsum.ColumnB is null) and
(t.ColumnC = tsum.ColumnC or t.ColumnC is null and tsum.ColumnC is null)
EDIT:
If you have NULL
values, you can also use the NULL
-safe operator:
on t.ColumnA <=> tsum.ColumnA and
t.ColumnB <=> tsum.ColumnB and
t.ColumnC <=> tsum.ColumnC
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