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I have this query (that works fine in MySQL):

SELECT units.*, activity_logs.created_at 
FROM "units" left join activity_logs on units.id=activity_logs.unit_id 
GROUP BY units.id 
ORDER BY activity_logs.created_at desc

Postgres gives this error:

PG::Error: ERROR:  column "activity_logs.created_at" must appear in the GROUP BY clause or be used in an aggregate function

I know that Postgres is right SQL-wise but how do I get what I want? That is the latest activity_log entry for each unit joined with all of the units table?

Thanks in advance!

  • Jacob
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1 Answer 1

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The error explains it: you need to use an aggregate function to make this deterministic, eg:

SELECT units.*, max(activity_logs.created_at)
FROM "units" left join activity_logs on units.id=activity_logs.unit_id 
GROUP BY units.id 
ORDER BY max(activity_logs.created_at) desc;
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  • Thanks - that did it! Can you explain it a little - I really don't quite get the difference between my solution and yours (except that yours works :-)
    – jriff
    Feb 21, 2013 at 7:14
  • @jriff Your original query relies on non-standard behaviour by MySQL, where you can "SELECT a, b FROM sometable GROUP BY a" and it'll just pick the first b it comes across. This is non-deterministic and not permitted by the SQL standard; the result can change depending on details of how the SQL engine executes the query, like index vs sequential scan choice. To do that in PostgreSQL you can use DISTINCT ON (...) but it's usually better to use an aggregate on the non-grouped column(s) so that PostgreSQL knows which of the candidate results to return no matter how the query gets executed. Feb 21, 2013 at 7:50
  • @jriff BTW, in older PostgreSQL versions you have to explicitly GROUP BY all columns, as older versions weren't smart enough to figure out that grouping by the primary key meant that all other columns were automatically part of the group as a consequence. Feb 21, 2013 at 7:53
  • Actually for some reason the order of the result is backwards - I need the latest activity_logs.created_at to be the first result. Here it is the last? (But in MySQL it is correct). Do you know why?
    – jriff
    Feb 22, 2013 at 4:41
  • @jriff It shouldn't be... did you forget the desc sort modifier? Otherwise, please provide sample data and schema on sqlfiddle.com Feb 22, 2013 at 6:26

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