--- slug: /en/sql-reference/aggregate-functions/reference/argmin sidebar_position: 110 --- # argMin Calculates the `arg` value for a minimum `val` value. If there are multiple rows with equal `val` being the maximum, which of the associated `arg` is returned is not deterministic. Both parts the `arg` and the `min` behave as [aggregate functions](/docs/en/sql-reference/aggregate-functions/index.md), they both [skip `Null`](/docs/en/sql-reference/aggregate-functions/index.md#null-processing) during processing and return not `Null` values if not `Null` values are available. **Syntax** ``` sql argMin(arg, val) ``` **Arguments** - `arg` — Argument. - `val` — Value. **Returned value** - `arg` value that corresponds to minimum `val` value. Type: matches `arg` type. **Example** Input table: ``` text ┌─user─────┬─salary─┐ │ director │ 5000 │ │ manager │ 3000 │ │ worker │ 1000 │ └──────────┴────────┘ ``` Query: ``` sql SELECT argMin(user, salary) FROM salary ``` Result: ``` text ┌─argMin(user, salary)─┐ │ worker │ └──────────────────────┘ ``` **Extended example** ```sql CREATE TABLE test ( a Nullable(String), b Nullable(Int64) ) ENGINE = Memory AS SELECT * FROM VALUES((NULL, 0), ('a', 1), ('b', 2), ('c', 2), (NULL, NULL), ('d', NULL)); select * from test; ┌─a────┬────b─┐ │ ᴺᵁᴸᴸ │ 0 │ │ a │ 1 │ │ b │ 2 │ │ c │ 2 │ │ ᴺᵁᴸᴸ │ ᴺᵁᴸᴸ │ │ d │ ᴺᵁᴸᴸ │ └──────┴──────┘ SELECT argMin(a, b), min(b) FROM test; ┌─argMin(a, b)─┬─min(b)─┐ │ a │ 0 │ -- argMin = a because it the first not `NULL` value, min(b) is from another row! └──────────────┴────────┘ SELECT argMin(tuple(a), b) FROM test; ┌─argMin(tuple(a), b)─┐ │ (NULL) │ -- The a `Tuple` that contains only a `NULL` value is not `NULL`, so the aggregate functions won't skip that row because of that `NULL` value └─────────────────────┘ SELECT (argMin((a, b), b) as t).1 argMinA, t.2 argMinB from test; ┌─argMinA─┬─argMinB─┐ │ ᴺᵁᴸᴸ │ 0 │ -- you can use `Tuple` and get both (all - tuple(*)) columns for the according max(b) └─────────┴─────────┘ SELECT argMin(a, b), min(b) FROM test WHERE a IS NULL and b IS NULL; ┌─argMin(a, b)─┬─min(b)─┐ │ ᴺᵁᴸᴸ │ ᴺᵁᴸᴸ │ -- All aggregated rows contains at least one `NULL` value because of the filter, so all rows are skipped, therefore the result will be `NULL` └──────────────┴────────┘ SELECT argMin(a, (b, a)), min(tuple(b, a)) FROM test; ┌─argMin(a, tuple(b, a))─┬─min(tuple(b, a))─┐ │ d │ (NULL,NULL) │ -- 'd' is the first not `NULL` value for the min └────────────────────────┴──────────────────┘ SELECT argMin((a, b), (b, a)), min(tuple(b, a)) FROM test; ┌─argMin(tuple(a, b), tuple(b, a))─┬─min(tuple(b, a))─┐ │ (NULL,NULL) │ (NULL,NULL) │ -- argMin returns (NULL,NULL) here because `Tuple` allows to don't skip `NULL` and min(tuple(b, a)) in this case is minimal value for this dataset └──────────────────────────────────┴──────────────────┘ SELECT argMin(a, tuple(b)) FROM test; ┌─argMin(a, tuple(b))─┐ │ d │ -- `Tuple` can be used in `min` to not skip rows with `NULL` values as b. └─────────────────────┘ ``` **See also** - [Tuple](/docs/en/sql-reference/data-types/tuple.md)