Opps. I meant GROUP BY... and it looks like I don't need to include the
COUNT().
SELECT email_addr, x GROUP BY email_addr HAVING x = 1;
Is this the only way to display a listing without duplicates, or is there a
more efficient (faster) way? I don't want to DELETE the duplicates, just
don't want dups to show up in my SELECT queries.
Thanks.
Jason
""Jason Caldwell"" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote in message
9bj9ld$pad$[EMAIL PROTECTED]">news:9bj9ld$pad$[EMAIL PROTECTED]...
> if i perform a SELECT query (say) like the following:
>
> SELECT email_addr FROM myTable WHERE x = 1
>
> in this query i want to pull-out (or list) all email addresses where x
> equals 1, however, suppose i don't want any duplicate email addresses...
>
> would i use ORDER BY and COUNT(*) to get listing of non-duplicate email
> addresses, and just ignore the COUNT() ?
>
> Thanks.
>
>
>
>
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