Count all months with "0's" starting today

  • we are tracking safety events and would like to count the # of consecutive months of 0 events starting from today backward. Maybe I'm overthinking it...but

    For example:

    Today is September and we had 0 events for Falls, it would be 1,

    Today is September and we had 2 events for Falls in September and 0 in August, it would be 0

    Today is September and we had 0 events for Falls in September and 0 in August, it would be 2

    Select SafetyIndicator, count(safetyevent)

    From SafetyEventTable

    Group by SafetyIndicator

    Would like to have it displayed as:

    Indicator, Count

    SafetyEvent1, 4

    SafetyEvent2, 3

    SafetyEvent3, 0

  • There isn't enough information to provide an answer. In order to help we will need a few things:

    1. Sample DDL in the form of CREATE TABLE statements

    2. Sample data in the form of INSERT INTO statements

    3. Expected results based on the sample data

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  • You might want to Google on calendar tables, because I believe you're going to need one to generate a sequence of months back in time as far as you want to look, before you start counting when events did not occur.

    As Sean suggested, DDL, consumable sample data and expected results are sure to get you a tested solution.


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  • Sounds like you need to create a Pivot Table and groupings with a count of number months at zero ....

    I will look into an example as this is something already done before.

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    SQL 2008 DBA/DBD - MCTS/MCITP

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  • Check if this works. It should generate a count of events per month, including months with no events. If it works then it's a trivial matter to use it as a table source for a query returning your output:

    SELECT

    safetyevent,

    c.[Month],

    [Rows] = COUNT(*)

    FROM SafetyEventTable si

    RIGHT OUTER JOIN (VALUES (1),(2),(3),(4),(5),(6),(7),(8),(9),(10),(11),(12)) c ([Month])

    ON c.[Month] = MONTH(si.[Date])

    GROUP BY safetyevent, c.[Month]

    “Write the query the simplest way. If through testing it becomes clear that the performance is inadequate, consider alternative query forms.” - Gail Shaw

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