SQL Math Functions with Use Cases

Ashfiquzzaman Sajal - Nov 28 '23 - - Dev Community

In this context,

  • ABS(x): Returns the absolute value of the input value 'x'. For example, ABS(-10) would return 10.

  • ROUND(x, d): Rounds the input value 'x' to the nearest whole number or to the specified number of decimal places 'd'. For instance, ROUND(3.14159, 2) would return 3.14.

  • CEILING(x): Returns the smallest integer value greater than or equal to the input value 'x'. For example, CEILING(4.25) would return 5.

  • FLOOR(x): Returns the largest integer value less than or equal to the input value 'x'. For instance, FLOOR(4.75) would return 4.

  • POWER(x, y): Raises the input value 'x' to the power 'y'. For example, POWER(2, 3) would return 8.

  • SQRT(x): Returns the square root of the input value 'x'. For instance, SQRT(16) would return 4.

Here are five advanced SQL queries that utilize SQL math functions:

Calculate the average salary of employees, rounding the result to two decimal places.

SELECT ROUND(AVG(salary), 2) AS average_salary
FROM employees;

Find the square root of the total sales for each product category.

SELECT category, SQRT(SUM(sales)) AS square_root_sales
FROM products
GROUP BY category;

Calculate the total revenue, rounding it to the nearest thousand.

SELECT ROUND(SUM(price * quantity), -3) AS total_revenue
FROM orders;

Find the ceiling value of the average rating for each product.

SELECT product_id, CEILING(AVG(rating)) AS ceiling_rating
FROM reviews
GROUP BY product_id;

Calculate the power of the discount percentage for each product.

SELECT product_id, POWER(discount, 2) AS discount_power
FROM products;

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