Rich Cullingford wrote:
> All,
> This is a straight SQL question, maybe not appropriate for a performance
> list, but...
>
> I have a simple stock holdings setup:
>
> => select * from t1;
> nam | co | num
> -----+-----------+------
> joe | ibm | 600
> abe | ibm | 1500
> joe | cisco | 1200
> abe | cisco | 800
> joe | novell | 500
> joe | microsoft | 200
>
> What I would like to see is a Top-n-holdings-by-name", e.g, for n=2:
>
> nam | co | num
> ----------+--------+-----
> joe | cisco | 1200
> joe | ibm | 600
> abe | ibm | 1500
> abe | cisco | 800
>
> I can get part of the way by using a LIMIT clause in a subquery, e.g,
>
> => select 'abe', a.co, a.num from (select co, num from t1 where
> nam='abe' order by num desc limit 2) as a;
> ?column? | co | num
> ----------+-------+------
> abe | ibm | 1500
> abe | cisco | 800
>
> but I can't figure out a correlated subquery (or GROUP BY arrangement or
> anything else) that will cycle through the names. I vaguely remember
> that these kinds or queries are hard to do in standard SQL, but I was
> hoping that PG, with its extensions...
I forgot about row subqueries; for n=3, for example:
=> SELECT * FROM t1
WHERE (nam,co,num) IN
(SELECT nam,co,num FROM t1 b
where b.nam=t1.nam
order by num desc limit 3)
order by nam, num desc;
nam | co | num
-----+--------+------
abe | ibm | 1500
abe | cisco | 800
joe | cisco | 1200
joe | ibm | 600
joe | novell | 500
(5 rows)
Seems to work...
Thanks all, Rich Cullingford
rculling@sysd.com