I have a table which contains the following data:
ID In Out
1 100.00 0.00
2 10.00 0.00
3 0.00 70.00
4
A simple LEFT JOIN
will suffice:
SELECT t.ID, t.In, t.Out, (SUM(t2.In) - SUM(t2.Out)) Balance
FROM mytable t
LEFT JOIN mytable t2 ON b2.ID <= b.ID
GROUP BY b.ID
Or subquery (which as it turns out is about twice as fast)
SELECT t.ID, t.In, t.Out,
(SELECT SUM(t2.In) - SUM(t2.Out) FROM mytable t2 WHERE t2.ID <= t.ID) Balance
FROM mytable t;
The most simple answer would be:
SELECT `ID`,
`In`,
`Out`,
@running_bal := @running_bal + (`In` - `Out`) as `Balance`
FROM tableName, (SELECT @running_bal := 0) tempName
Short answer, yes
Longer answer, you can use a variable to tally it up as it iterates down the rows, i.e.
SELECT
`table`.`ID`,
`table`.`In`,
`table`.`Out`,
@Balance := @Balance + `table`.`In` - `table`.`Out` AS `Balance`
FROM `table`, (SELECT @Balance := 0) AS variableInit
ORDER BY `table`.`ID` ASC
The , (SELECT @Balance := 0) AS variableInit
ensures that @Balance is initialised to 0 before you start. For each row it then sets @Balance to be @Balance + In - Out
, and then outputs the calculated value.
Also it's worth making certain the ORDER is consistent as otherwise the Balance will vary depending on what order the rows are returned. If you wanted to then order it back to front, for example, you could use this as a subquery as then the outer query deals with the calculated values thus ensuring the Balance remains correct i.e.
SELECT
`balanceCalculation`.`ID`,
`balanceCalculation`.`In`,
`balanceCalculation`.`Out`,
`balanceCalculation`.`Balance`
FROM (
SELECT
`table`.`ID`,
`table`.`In`,
`table`.`Out`,
@Balance := @Balance + `table`.`In` - `table`.`Out` AS `Balance`
FROM `table`, (SELECT @Balance := 0) AS variableInit
ORDER BY `table`.`ID` ASC
) AS `balanceCalculation`
ORDER BY `balanceCalculation`.`ID` DESC