The SQL standard requires this behaviour, though some databases like MySQL ignore it and instead return unpredictable results.
If there's more than one row for "cond = good" and you ask for the "id" of the row where "cond = good", which row should the database give you? The row with id = 3, or id = 2? How should it know which to pick? MySQL picks an arbitrary row if there are multiple candidates, but this isn't allowed by the standard.
In your case you seem to want to pick the lowest-price row for each condition.
PostgreSQL provides an extension, DISTINCT ON ...
, to help with this. Clodaldo has demonstrated this in his answer, so I won't repeat that here. Using DISTINCT ON
will be much more efficient than the example below.
The SQL-standard way would be to use a window to rank the results, then filter on the ranked data. Unfortunately this is pretty inefficient as it requires all rows that match the inner where clause to be collected and sorted.
SELECT *
FROM (
SELECT *, dense_rank() OVER w AS itemrank
FROM items
WHERE product_id = 1 AND items.status = 'in_stock'
WINDOW w AS (PARTITION BY cond ORDER BY price ASC)
) ranked_items
WHERE itemrank = 1;
(http://sqlfiddle.com/#!1/33786/19)
Another SQL-standard way is to use an aggregation subquery to find the min prices for each category then display all rows with the min price:
SELECT *
FROM items INNER JOIN (
SELECT cond, min(price) AS minprice
FROM items
WHERE product_id = 1 AND items.status = 'in_stock'
GROUP BY cond
) minprices(cond, price)
ON (items.price = minprices.price AND items.cond = minprices.cond)
ORDER BY items.price;
Unlike the DISTINCT ON
version, though, this will display multiple entries if the lowest priced item has more than one entry with the same cond and price.
So.. you should really use the DISTINCT ON approach, but you need to understand it. Start with the PostgreSQL documentation here.
On a side note, newer PostgreSQL versions allow you to refer to any column of a table whose primary key you've listed in GROUP BY
; they identify the functional dependency of the other columns on the primary key. So you don't have to aggregate other cols if you've mentioned the PK in newer versions. That's what the standard requires, but older versions weren't smart enough to figure it out and required all columns to be listed explicitly.
That's what people who ask this question usually want to know, but doesn't apply strictly to your question since it turns out you're trying to use GROUP BY
to filter rows.
ORDER BY
an un-aggregated columnprice
. You can onlyORDER BY
the query results.