The problem is that in the duplicate key clauses you cannot use any grouping functions (such as COUNT
. However, there is an easy way around this problem. You just assign the result of the COUNT(crime_id)
call to a variable, which you can use in the duplicate key clauses. Your insert statement would then look like this:
INSERT INTO `simple_crimecount` (`date` , `city` , `crimecount`)(
SELECT
`date`,
`city`,
@determined_crimecount := count(`crime_id`) AS `determined_crimecount`
FROM `big_log_of_crimes`
GROUP BY `date`, `city`
) ON DUPLICATE KEY UPDATE `crimecount` = @determined_crimecount;
I have create an SQL Fiddle that shows you how it works: SQL-Fiddle
You could also use UPDATE crimecount = VALUES(crimecount)
and no variables:
INSERT INTO `simple_crimecount` (`date` , `city` , `crimecount`)(
SELECT
`date`,
`city`,
count(`crime_id`) AS `determined_crimecount`
FROM `big_log_of_crimes`
GROUP BY `date`, `city`
) ON DUPLICATE KEY UPDATE `crimecount` = VALUES(crimecount);
See the SQL-Fiddle-2
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