Thread: Table results format - should I use crosstab? If so, how?

Table results format - should I use crosstab? If so, how?

From
Jennifer Mackown
Date:
Hi, 

I have a problem with getting a table to display in the way I want it to. It's one of those things that looks so simple I should be able to do it in 5 minutes, but I've been working on it all afternoon and I'm getting nowhere!!

What I have is the following:

Date               Firstday    Lastday
2014/03/12        1                1
2014/03/18        1                0
2014/03/19        0                1
2014/03/21        1                1


And what I need to see is this:

Firstday             Lastday
2014/03/12       2013/03/12
2014/03/18       2013/03/19
2014/03/21       2013/03/21



Can anyone help?

Thanks, 

Jennifer 

Re: Table results format - should I use crosstab? If so, how?

From
David Johnston
Date:
Jennifer Mackown wrote
> Hi, 
> I have a problem with getting a table to display in the way I want it to.
> It's one of those things that looks so simple I should be able to do it in
> 5 minutes, but I've been working on it all afternoon and I'm getting
> nowhere!!
> What I have is the following:
> Date               Firstday    Lastday2014/03/12        1               
> 12014/03/18        1                02014/03/19        0               
> 12014/03/21        1                1
> 
> And what I need to see is this:
> Firstday             Lastday2014/03/12       2013/03/122014/03/18      
> 2013/03/192014/03/21       2013/03/21

WITH data (dt, isfirst, islast) AS ( --setup data
VALUES ('2014-03-12'::date, true, true), ('2013-03-18', true, false),
('2013-03-19', false, true), ('2013-03-21', true, true)
)
, explode AS ( --need to convert columns to rows; use UNION ALL to do this
SELECT dt, 1 AS pos FROM data WHERE isfirst --all start rows
UNION ALL 
SELECT dt, 2 AS pos FROM data WHERE islast --all end rows
)
, ordered AS ( --need to arrange the rows so start comes before end
SELECT * FROM explode ORDER BY dt ASC, pos
)
SELECT firstday, lastday FROM ( --then for each end row in the pair get the
immediately prior row as its start
SELECT pos, dt AS lastday, lag(dt) OVER () AS firstday 
FROM ordered
) calc WHERE pos = 2 ORDER BY firstday DESC --and only display the end rows
;

This directly solves the problem, however:
1) Start & End dates must be defined in pairs (none missing and no extra
dates in between)
2) There can be no overlapping ranges


Ideally you would have some kind of identifier attached to every start date
and a corresponding identifier on the matching end date.  Partitioning on
that identifier and taking the first and last date found would be the most
stable method.

David J.





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Re: Table results format - should I use crosstab? If so, how?

From
hari.fuchs@gmail.com
Date:
Jennifer Mackown <niftyshellsuit@outlook.com> writes:

> Hi, 
> I have a problem with getting a table to display in the way I want it to. It's one of those things that looks so
simpleI should be able to do it in 5 minutes, but I've been working on it all afternoon and I'm getting nowhere!!
 
> What I have is the following:
> Date               Firstday    Lastday2014/03/12        1                12014/03/18        1
02014/03/19       0                12014/03/21        1                1
 
>
> And what I need to see is this:
> Firstday             Lastday2014/03/12       2013/03/122014/03/18       2013/03/192014/03/21       2013/03/21
>
>
> Can anyone help?

WITH tmp (id, firstday, lastday) AS ( SELECT row_number() OVER (PARTITION BY t1.date ORDER BY t2.date),        t1.date,
t2.dateFROM tbl t1 JOIN tbl t2 ON t2.date >= t1.date   AND t2.lastday = 1 WHERE t1.firstday = 1
 
)
SELECT id, firstday, lastday
FROM tmp
WHERE id = 1
ORDER BY firstday, lastday