DISTINCT Clause

Course- Oracle/PLSQL >

This Oracle tutorial explains how to use the Oracle DISTINCT clause with syntax and examples.

Description

The Oracle DISTINCT clause is used to remove duplicates from the result set. The DISTINCT clause can only be used with SELECT statements.

Syntax

The syntax for the DISTINCT clause in Oracle/PLSQL is:

SELECT DISTINCT expressions

FROM tables

[WHERE conditions];

Parameters or Arguments

expressions

The columns or calculations that you wish to retrieve.

tables

The tables that you wish to retrieve records from. There must be at least one table listed in the FROM clause.

WHERE conditions

Optional. The conditions that must be met for the records to be selected.

Note

  • When only one expression is provided in the DISTINCT clause, the query will return the unique values for that expression.
  • When more than one expression is provided in the DISTINCT clause, the query will retrieve unique combinations for the expressions listed.
  • In Oracle, the DISTINCT clause doesn't ignore NULL values. So when using the DISTINCT clause in your SQL statement, your result set will include NULL as a distinct value.

Example - With Single Expression

Let's look at the simplest Oracle DISTINCT clause example. We can use the Oracle DISTINCT clause to return a single field that removes the duplicates from the result set.

For example:

SELECT DISTINCT state

FROM customers

WHERE last_name = 'Smith';

This Oracle DISTINCT example would return all unique state values from the customers table where the customer's last_name is 'Smith'.

Example - With Multiple Expressions

Let's look at how you might use the Oracle DISTINCT clause to remove duplicates from more than one field in your SELECT statement.

For example:

SELECT DISTINCT city, state

FROM customers

WHERE total_orders > 10

ORDER BY city;

This Oracle DISTINCT clause example would return each unique city and state combination from the customers table where the total_orders is greater than 10. The results are sorted in ascending order by city.

In this case, the DISTINCT applies to each field listed after the DISTINCT keyword, and therefore returns distinct combinations.