On 11/5/2011 12:49 PM, Tom Lane wrote:
Cstdenis <lists@xxxxxxxxxxx> writes:I am trying to write a query that selects recent submissions (sorted by submission_date) but only selects the most recent one for each user_id.example query: /select distinct on (user_id) * from stories order by date_submitted desc limit 10;/However postgres will not allow me to filter out duplicate rows with distinct unless I sort on that column, which would product useless results for me.Do the DISTINCT ON in a sub-query, with an ORDER BY appropriate for that task, and then re-sort the rows the way you want them presented in the outer query. SELECT ... FROM (SELECT DISTINCT ON ... ORDER BY ...) ss ORDER BY ...; regards, tom lane If I understand that you are proposing as select * fromI think it has the problem of which of the stories by that user is selected is random rather than the most recent being guaranteed (because the distinct is done before the sort). Or am I misunderstanding this? The suggestions by others of using max(date_submitted) may be a good workaround for this, but I also need to do the same thing sorted by a calculated score value which I do not think will be sufficiently unique for Tair's suggestion. |