Reputation: 38641
I'm using the following database:
CREATE TABLE datas (d_id INTEGER PRIMARY KEY, name_id numeric, countdata numeric);
INSERT INTO datas VALUES(1,1,20); //(NULL,1,20);
INSERT INTO datas VALUES(2,1,47); //(NULL,1,47);
INSERT INTO datas VALUES(3,2,36); //(NULL,2,36);
INSERT INTO datas VALUES(4,2,58); //(NULL,2,58);
INSERT INTO datas VALUES(5,2,87); //(NULL,2,87);
CREATE TABLE names (n_id INTEGER PRIMARY KEY, name text);
INSERT INTO names VALUES(1,'nameA'); //(NULL,'nameA');
INSERT INTO names VALUES(2,'nameB'); //(NULL,'nameB');
What I would like to do, is to select all values (rows) of names
- to which all columns of datas
will be appended, for the row where datas
.countdata
is maximum for n_id
(and of course, where name_id = n_id
).
I can somewhat get there with the following query:
sqlite> .header ON
sqlite> SELECT * FROM names AS n1
LEFT OUTER JOIN (
SELECT d_id, name_id, countdata FROM datas AS d1
WHERE d1.countdata IN (
SELECT MAX(countdata) FROM datas
WHERE name_id=1
)
) AS p1 ON n_id=name_id;
n1.n_id|n1.name|p1.d_id|p1.name_id|p1.countdata
1|nameA|2|1|47
2|nameB|||
... however - obviously - it only works for a single row (the one explicitly set by name_id=1
).
The problem is, the SQL query fails whenever I try to somehow reference the "current" n_id
:
sqlite> SELECT * FROM names AS n1
LEFT OUTER JOIN (
SELECT d_id, name_id, countdata FROM datas AS d1
WHERE d1.countdata IN (
SELECT MAX(countdata) FROM datas
WHERE name_id=n1.n_id
)
) AS p1 ON n_id=name_id;
SQL error: no such column: n1.n_id
Is there any way of achieving what I want in Sqlite2??
Thanks in advance,
Cheers!
Upvotes: 1
Views: 1320
Reputation: 38641
Oh, well - that wasn't trivial at all, but here is a solution:
sqlite> SELECT * FROM names AS n1
LEFT OUTER JOIN (
SELECT d1.*
FROM datas AS d1, (
SELECT max(countdata) as countdata,name_id
FROM datas
GROUP BY name_id
) AS ttemp
WHERE d1.name_id = ttemp.name_id AND d1.countdata = ttemp.countdata
) AS p1 ON n1.n_id=p1.name_id;
n1.n n1.name p1.d_id p1.name_id p1.countdata
---- ------------ ---------- ---------- -----------------------------------
1 nameA 2 1 47
2 nameB 5 2 87
Well, hope this ends up helping someone, :) Cheers!
Notes: note that just calling max(countdata) screws up competely d_id
:
sqlite> select d_id,name_id,max(countdata) as countdata from datas group by name_id;
d_id name_id countdata
---- ------------ ----------
3 2 87
1 1 47
so to get correct corresponding d_id
, we must do max()
on datas
separately - and then perform sort of an intersect with the full datas
(except that intersect in sqlite requires that there are equal number of columns in both datasets, which is not the case here - and even if we made it that way, as seen above d_id
will be wrong, so intersect will not work).
One way to do that is in using a sort of a temporary table, and then utilize a multiple table SELECT query so as to set conditions between full datas
and the subset returned via max(countdata)
, as shown below:
sqlite> CREATE TABLE ttemp AS SELECT max(countdata) as countdata,name_id FROM datas GROUP BY name_id;
sqlite> SELECT d1.*, ttemp.* FROM datas AS d1, ttemp WHERE d1.name_id = ttemp.name_id AND d1.countdata = ttemp.countdata;
d1.d d1.name_id d1.countda ttemp.coun ttemp.name_id
---- ------------ ---------- ---------- -----------------------------------
2 1 47 47 1
5 2 87 87 2
sqlite> DROP TABLE ttemp;
or, we can rewrite the above so a SELECT subquery (sub-select?) is used, like this:
sqlite> SELECT d1.* FROM datas AS d1, (SELECT max(countdata) as countdata,name_id FROM datas GROUP BY name_id) AS ttemp WHERE d1.name_id = ttemp.name_id AND d1.countdata = ttemp.countdata;
d1.d d1.name_id d1.countda
---- ------------ ----------
2 1 47
5 2 87
Upvotes: 2