I have a table with several hundred thousand entries and I'm trying to use a query to get a result set for a specific receiver_id and group them by sender_id. My current SQL query works but I want to know if there could be any potential problems with using two MAX calls in the statement. It looks like this:
SELECT MAX(id) as id, sender_id, receiver_id, MAX(date) as date
FROM messages
WHERE receiver_id=5 and belong_to=5
GROUP BY sender_id
The table date looks like this:
id sender_id receiver_id content date belong_to
-- --------- ----------- ------- ------------------- ---------
1 5 7 test 2013-03-11 10:33:54 7
2 5 7 test 2013-03-11 10:33:54 5
3 13 7 test 2 2013-03-13 12:01:36 7
4 13 7 test 2 2013-03-13 12:01:36 13
5 5 7 test 3 2013-03-14 09:15:37 7
6 5 7 test 3 2013-03-14 09:15:37 5
7 25 5 data1 2013-03-15 11:01:36 5
8 25 5 data1 2013-03-15 11:01:36 25
9 16 5 data2 2013-03-17 09:17:17 5
10 16 5 data2 2013-03-17 09:17:17 16
11 25 5 data3 2013-04-05 09:17:17 5
12 25 5 data3 2013-04-05 09:17:17 16
The output from my query is this:
id sender_id receiver_id date
-- --------- ----------- -------------------
9 16 5 2013-03-17 09:17:17
11 25 5 2013-04-05 09:17:17
Are there any issues with this query using the MAX calls? If so what is the alternative?
Receiver_id
in the select clause without also grouping byreceiver_id
is because the where clause restricts the query to only one value forreceiver_id
[5]. If there were more than one receiver_id value in the results you would have to either also group byreceiver_id
, or not include it in the resultsreceiver_id
will be chosen 'at random' from one of the rows that fit under that group by, because it is not an aggregate and it is not grouped over in an aggregate/group by query. (Only MySQL will let you do this, all other SQL flavours will prevent such meaningless queries.)MAX()
values refer to the same row.receiver_id = 5
. This is perfectly ok.