using max() aggregate

Started by Louis-David Mitterrandalmost 26 years ago4 messagesgeneral
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#1Louis-David Mitterrand
cunctator@apartia.ch

Hello,

I am trying to return the most recently updated record from a table:

SELECT max(stopdate) FROM auction;

and this works but only returns the timestamp, however if I try to get
another column with the aggregate it fails:

SELECT title,max(stopdate) FROM auction;
ERROR: Attribute auction.title must be GROUPed or used in an aggregate function

Ok, so I group it now:

SELECT title,max(stopdate) FROM auction GROUP BY title;
title | max
---------------+------------------------
dfsdfsdf | 2000-07-10 05:00:00+02
dssdfsdfsdfsf | 2000-07-09 16:00:00+02
sdfsdfsdfsdf | 2001-04-10 15:00:00+02
(3 rows)

But the problem is that I now get three rows when I only want the max()
item.

How should I do it?

Thanks in advance,

--
Louis-David Mitterrand - ldm@apartia.org - http://www.apartia.fr

"Logiciels libres : nourris au code source sans farine animale."

#2Tom Lane
tgl@sss.pgh.pa.us
In reply to: Louis-David Mitterrand (#1)
Re: using max() aggregate

Louis-David Mitterrand <cunctator@apartia.ch> writes:

I am trying to return the most recently updated record from a table:
SELECT max(stopdate) FROM auction;
and this works but only returns the timestamp, however if I try to get
another column with the aggregate it fails:

Perhaps

select * from auction order by stopdate desc limit 1;

In 7.0 this should even be pretty quick, if you have an index on
stopdate.

regards, tom lane

#3Louis-David Mitterrand
cunctator@apartia.ch
In reply to: Tom Lane (#2)
Re: using max() aggregate

On Fri, Jun 16, 2000 at 02:05:53AM -0400, Tom Lane wrote:

Louis-David Mitterrand <cunctator@apartia.ch> writes:

I am trying to return the most recently updated record from a table:
SELECT max(stopdate) FROM auction;
and this works but only returns the timestamp, however if I try to get
another column with the aggregate it fails:

Perhaps

select * from auction order by stopdate desc limit 1;

In 7.0 this should even be pretty quick, if you have an index on
stopdate.

Thanks, yours seems to be the best solution.

The performance hit between max() and ORDER BY should be roughly
comparable?

--
Louis-David Mitterrand - ldm@apartia.org - http://www.apartia.fr

#4Tom Lane
tgl@sss.pgh.pa.us
In reply to: Louis-David Mitterrand (#3)
Re: using max() aggregate

Louis-David Mitterrand <cunctator@apartia.ch> writes:

On Fri, Jun 16, 2000 at 02:05:53AM -0400, Tom Lane wrote:

Perhaps
select * from auction order by stopdate desc limit 1;

In 7.0 this should even be pretty quick, if you have an index on
stopdate.

Thanks, yours seems to be the best solution.

The performance hit between max() and ORDER BY should be roughly
comparable?

No! That's why I muttered about an index. max() has to scan the
whole table (at least in its current incarnation). ORDER BY with
LIMIT should be implemented as an indexscan that's only run for
one tuple --- in other words, the system basically reaches into
the index, pulls out the last entry, and you're done.

OTOH, if you don't have an index, then the ORDER BY has to be
implemented as a sequential scan followed by sort, which will surely
be slower than just a sequential scan --- for a large table it
will lose even compared to two sequential scans, which is what
you're really looking at for the subselect-based versions.

Either way, the performance is not very comparable...

BTW you need to be running 7.0.* to get the smart plan for
ORDER BY + LIMIT, the pre-7.0 optimizer would miss it in
many cases.

regards, tom lane