On Jun 2, 2012, at 14:50, Alexander Reichstadt <lxr@xxxxxxx> wrote: > Hi, > > I have a query I cannot figure out in postgres or actually in any other way than using the client front end, which I would prefer not to do. > > So, I have 4 tables > > pets > persons > companies > pets_reference > > pets have owners, the owner at any point in time is either a persons or a company, never both at the same time. > > So, the pets_reference table has the fields: > > refid_pets matching table pets, field id > refid_persons matching table persons, field id > refid_companies matching table companies, field id > ownersince which is a timestamp > > A pet owner can change to persons A, resulting in a record in pets_reference connecting pet and person with a timestamp, setting refid_companies to zero and refid_persons to person A's record's id value. If the owner changes to some other person B, then another record is added to pets_reference. Or if the owner for that pet changes to a company, then a new record is added with refid_persons being zero and refid_companies being the id value of that companies id field value. So at the end of the day pets_reference results in a history of owners. > > Now, the problem is with displaying a table with pets and only their current owners. I can't figure out two things. > For one it seems I would need to somehow build a query which uses an if-then branch to check if companies is zero or persons is zero to ensure to either reference a persons or a companies record. > The second issue is that I only need the max(ownersince) record, because I only need the current owner and not past owners. > > I toyed around with DISTINCT max(ownersince) and GROUP BY, but it only results in errors. I am not the SQL guru, I know my way around so far and am learning, but this is kind of another league and I can't really show any good results I've come up with so far. Please, can someone help? > > Thanks > Alex > > While you can solve the problem as structured have you considered an "entity" table that is a super-type of both person and company? The entity id would then be the foreign key. For you immediate problem you have to perform a UNION query. The first sub-query will output records where personid is not null and the second sub-query will output records where companyid is not null. If you are using 8.4 or above after the union you can use a window function (rank) on the ordered ownersince date and then in an outer query filter so that only rank=1 records are kept. David J. -- Sent via pgsql-general mailing list (pgsql-general@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx) To make changes to your subscription: http://www.postgresql.org/mailpref/pgsql-general