Here’s my code:
select yr,count(*)
from movie
join casting on casting.movieid=movie.id
join actor on casting.actorid = actor.id
where actor.name = 'John Travolta'
group by yr;
Here’s the question:
Which were the busiest years for ‘John Travolta’. Show the number of movies he made for each year.
Here’s the table structure:
movie(id, title, yr, score, votes, director)
actor(id, name)
casting(movieid, actorid, ord)
This is the output I am getting:
yr count(*)
1976 1
1977 1
1978 1
1981 1
1994 1
-- etc.
I need to get the rows for which count(*) is max.
How do I do this?
Use:
Ordering by
num_movies DESCwill put the highest values at the top of the resultset. If numerous years have the same count, them.yrwill place the most recent year at the top… until the nextnum_moviesvalue changes.Can I use a MAX(COUNT(*)) ?
No, you can not layer aggregate functions on top of one another in the same SELECT clause. The inner aggregate would have to be performed in a subquery. IE: