Hi.
AFAICS the information about the *total* number of rows is in the "result"
somehow. When I execute a "limit 1" query with EXPLAIN ANALYZE, I se the
total number of columns in "rows=200819", so the information is there.
andreak=# EXPLAIN ANALYZE select p.id from onp_crm_person p order by p.created
DESC limit 1;
QUERY PLAN
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------Limit
(cost=0.00..0.04 rows=1 width=12) (actual time=0.046..0.048 rows=1
loops=1) -> Index Scan Backward using origo_person_created_idx on onp_crm_person p
(cost=0.00..8396.45 rows=200819 width=12) (actual time=0.041..0.041 rows=1
loops=1)Total runtime: 0.104 ms
(3 rows)
Is it possible to use some sort of "magic" function to get this number out as
a separate column? And is this number accurate? It has to be the same as
running a separate "count(*)"-query to count the totals, which is exactly
what I'm trying to avoid.
Oracle has a special rownum and over() which can be used to accomplish this:
SELECT tmp.*, max(rownum) over() as total_countFROM (subquery) tmp
Does PG have any equivalent way?
--
Andreas Joseph Krogh <andreak@officenet.no>
Senior Software Developer / Manager
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