Returns the total of the values.
sum([all | distinct] expression)
applies sum to all values. all is the default.
eliminates duplicate values before sum is applied. distinct is optional.
is a column name, constant, function, any combination of column names, constants, and functions connected by arithmetic or bitwise operators, or a subquery. With aggregates, an expression is usually a column name. For more information, see “Expressions”.
Calculates the average advance and the sum of total sales for all business books. Each of these aggregate functions produces a single summary value for all of the retrieved rows:
select avg(advance), sum(total_sales) from titles where type = "business"
Used with a group by clause, the aggregate functions produce single values for each group, rather than for the entire table. This statement produces summary values for each type of book:
select type, avg(advance), sum(total_sales) from titles group by type
Groups the titles table by publishers, and includes only those groups of publishers who have paid more than $25,000 in total advances and whose books average more than $15 in price:
select pub_id, sum(advance), avg(price) from titles group by pub_id having sum(advance) > $25000 and avg(price) > $15
sum, an aggregate function, finds the sum of all the values in a column. sum can only be used on numeric (integer, floating point, or money) datatypes. Null values are ignored in calculating sums.
When you sum integer data, Adaptive Server treats the result as an int value, even if the datatype of the column is smallint or tinyint.When you sum bigint data, Adaptive Server treats the result as a bigint.To avoid overflow errors in DB-Library programs, declare all variables for results of averages or sums appropriately.
You cannot use sum with the binary datatypes.
This function defines only numeric types; use with Unicode expressions generates an error.
ANSI SQL – Compliance level: Transact-SQL extension.
Any user can execute sum.
Commands compute clause, group by and having clauses, select, where clause