On Mon, 7 Feb 2005, Schuhmacher, Bret wrote:
> I've got a table with the following schema:
> Phone_num latlon location_when
>
> Each row holds a user's phone number, their location, and the time they
> were at that location. There can be up to 120 rows per phone_num, each
> with a (potentially) different latlon, and each with a different
> location_when (the primary key).
>
> My problem - how do you get a list of each phone_num's most recent
> position and time? I want to weed out everything but a user's most
> recent location, returning only one line per user.
>
> Here's an example:
>
> Phone_num latlon location_when
> 1111111111 22.12345,-90.12345 0901
> 1111111111 22.11111,-89.45678 0911
> 1111111111 21.99999,-89.55555 0921
> 2222222222 18.12334,-120.12345 1156
> 2222222222 18.10101,-120.11111 1206
> 2222222222 18.00001,-120.34889 1216
>
>
> Given this, I want a list like this:
> 1111111111 21.99999,-89.55555 0921
> 2222222222 18.00001,-120.34889 1216
>
>
>
> Obviously, it's something along these lines:
> Select *,min(age(now(),location_when))
> From table
> Group by phone_num;
>
> Unfortunately, Postgres wants me to group by latlon and location_when,
> either of which makes each row a unique entity and causes me problems.
>
> I'd prefer to not use temp tables, but at this point I'll take any
> pointers I can get. Intersect? Some form of outer join with the same
> table?
I believe the SQL way is to correlate the outside with a subquery so
if just using the maximum location_when were sufficient (and there aren't
nulls) I think you could do something like:
select * from table where (phone_num, location_when) in
(select phone_num, max(location_when) from table group by phone_num);
In PostgreSQL, there's an extension which lets you do this slightly better
in which case maybe something like this:
select distinct on (phone_num) * from table order by phone_num,
location_when desc.