3

I have a table that looks like this:

ID  UserID  DateTime             TypeID

1     1     1/1/2010 10:00:00      1
2     2     1/1/2010 10:01:50      1
3     1     1/1/2010 10:02:50      1
4     1     1/1/2010 10:03:50      1
5     1     1/1/2010 11:00:00      1
6     2     1/1/2010 11:00:50      1

I need to query all users where their typeID is 1, but have only one row per 15 mins

For example, the result should be:

1     1     1/1/2010 10:00:00      1
2     2     1/1/2010 10:01:50      1
5     1     1/1/2010 11:00:00      1
6     2     1/1/2010 11:00:50      1

IDs 3 & 4 are not shown because 15 min haven't been passed since the last record for the specific userID.

IDs 1 & 5 are shown because 15 minutes has been passed for this specific userID Same as for IDs 2 & 6.

How can I do it?

Thanks

3
  • 1
    Why does the second row of output have TypeID 2?
    – Jon Skeet
    Sep 4, 2011 at 6:42
  • What do you want to do if an event occurs every minute for 20mins? should you see the first record or two, one for minute 1 and one for minute 16?
    – Seph
    Sep 4, 2011 at 13:40
  • Seph: in case that this even occurs every minute for 20 min, the first record will be 1 and the second will be 16
    – Shay
    Sep 4, 2011 at 15:50

3 Answers 3

1

Try this:

select * from 
(
      select ID, UserID, 
      Max(DateTime) as UpperBound, 
      Min(DateTime) as LowerBound, 
      TypeID 
      from the_table
      where TypeID=1
      group by ID,UserID,TypeID
) t 
where datediff(mi,LowerBound,UpperBound)>=15

EDIT: SINCE MY ABOVE ATTEMPT WAS WRONG, I'm adding one more approach using a Sql table-valued Function that does not require recursion, since, understandable, it's a big concern.

Step 1: Create a table-type as follows (LoginDate is the DateTime column in Shay's example - DateTime name conflicts with a SQL data type and I think it's wise to avoid these conflicts)

CREATE TYPE [dbo].[TVP] AS TABLE(
    [ID] [int] NOT NULL,
    [UserID] [int] NOT NULL,
    [LoginDate] [datetime] NOT NULL,
    [TypeID] [int] NOT NULL
)
GO

Step 2: Create the following Function:

CREATE FUNCTION [dbo].[fnGetLoginFreq] 
(
    -- notice: TVP is the type (declared above)
    @TVP TVP readonly
)
RETURNS 
@Table_Var TABLE 
(
    -- This will be our result set
    ID int, 
    UserId int,
    LoginTime datetime,
    TypeID int,
    RowNumber int
)
AS
BEGIN
    --We will insert records in this table as we go through the rows in the
    --table passed in as parameter and decide that we should add an entry because
    --15' had elapsed between logins 
    DECLARE @temp  table
    (
        ID int,
        UserId int, 
        LoginTime datetime,
        TypeID int
    )
    -- seems silly, but is not because we need to add a row_number column to help
    -- in our iteration and table-valued paramters cannot be modified inside the function
    insert into @Table_var
    select ID,UserID,Logindate,TypeID,row_number() OVER(ORDER BY UserID,LoginDate) AS [RowNumber] 
    from @TVP order by UserID asc,LoginDate desc

    declare @Index int,@End int,@CurrentLoginTime datetime, @NextLoginTime datetime, @CurrentUserID int , @NextUserID int

    select @Index=1,@End=count(*) from @Table_var

    while(@Index<=@End)
    begin        
            select @CurrentLoginTime=LoginTime,@CurrentUserID=UserID from @Table_var where RowNumber=@Index
            select @NextLoginTime=LoginTime,@NextUserID=UserID from @Table_var where RowNumber=(@Index+1)

            if(@CurrentUserID=@NextUserID)
            begin
                if( abs(DateDiff(mi,@CurrentLoginTime,@NextLoginTime))>=15)
                begin   
                    insert into @temp
                    select ID,UserID,LoginTime,TypeID
                    from @Table_var
                    where RowNumber=@Index
                end     
            END
            else 
            bEGIN
                    insert into @temp
                    select ID,UserID,LoginTime,TypeID
                    from @Table_var
                    where RowNumber=@Index and UserID=@CurrentUserID 
            END

            if(@Index=@End)--last element?
            begin
                insert into @temp
                select ID,UserID,LoginTime,TypeID
                from @Table_var
                where RowNumber=@Index and not 
                abs((select datediff(mi,@CurrentLoginTime,max(LoginTime)) from @temp where UserID=@CurrentUserID))<=14
            end

            select @Index=@Index+1
    end 

    delete  from @Table_var

    insert into @Table_var
    select ID, UserID ,LoginTime ,TypeID ,row_number() OVER(ORDER BY UserID,LoginTime) AS 'RowNumber' 
    from @temp

    return 

END

Step 3: Give it a spin

declare @TVP TVP

INSERT INTO @TVP
select ID,UserId,[DateType],TypeID from Shays_table where TypeID=1 --AND any other date restriction you want to add 

select * from fnGetLoginFreq(@TVP) order by LoginTime asc

My tests returned this:

ID  UserId  LoginTime               TypeID  RowNumber
2   2       2010-01-01 10:01:50.000 1       3
4   1       2010-01-01 10:03:50.000 1       1
5   1       2010-01-01 11:00:00.000 1       2
6   2       2010-01-01 11:00:50.000 1       4
7
  • No, it doesn't work. It gives me 0 records. Even if I do >=1.
    – Shay
    Sep 4, 2011 at 7:29
  • @Shay: I just realized that you want to output UserID 1 twice according to your data sample. You won't be able to accomplish this in a simple query. You'll have to order by UserID and [DateTime] and go through a loop with 2 pointers; one that points to the current row and one that points to the next one. If the next row's UserID is the same as the current one and the TimeDiff of current row's [DateTime] and next row's [DateTime] is >=15, insert current's row into a temp table and continue on to the row after next one repeating above steps.
    – Icarus
    Sep 4, 2011 at 7:54
  • @Shay: Once you finish the first iteration you need to repeat all of the steps above until you end up with a temp table that does not have 2 consecutive rows with the same UserID. That will be your stop condition. If you want to do this in SQL, you can write a table-valued function that receives a table as a parameter and calls itself recursively (you can have a maximum of 32 recursive function calls in SQL but can be adjusted). You will return from the function when the stop condition mentioned in my previous comment is reached. Good luck.
    – Icarus
    Sep 4, 2011 at 8:01
  • @Marthin Smith: I know, that's what Shay said! I misunderstood Shay's requirements initially.
    – Icarus
    Sep 4, 2011 at 20:45
  • 1
    @Martin Smith: I agree, but should I have deleted it to avoid the downvote once it was clear that this wouldn't work? I joined SO long ago but I've been participating actively only for a couple of weeks so I'm still getting familiarized with the "protocol" here.
    – Icarus
    Sep 4, 2011 at 20:58
0

How about this, it's fairly straight forward and gives you the result you need:

SELECT ID, UserID, [DateTime], TypeID
FROM Users
WHERE Users.TypeID = 1
  AND NOT EXISTS (
    SELECT TOP 1 1 
    FROM Users AS U2 
    WHERE U2.ID <> Users.ID 
      AND U2.UserID = Users.UserID 
      AND U2.[DateTime] BETWEEN DATEADD(MI, -15, Users.[DateTime]) AND Users.[DateTime] 
      AND U2.TypeID = 1)

The NOT EXISTS restricts to only show records that have no record within 15minutes before them, so you will see the first record in a block rather than one every 15mins.

Edit: Since you want to see one every 15mins this should do without using recursion:

SELECT Users.ID, Users.UserID, Users.[DateTime], Users.TypeID 
FROM
  (
    SELECT MIN(ID) AS ID, UserID, 
      DATEADD(minute, DATEDIFF(minute,0,[DateTime]) / 15 * 15, 0) AS [DateTime]
    FROM Users
    GROUP BY UserID, DATEADD(minute, DATEDIFF(minute,0,[DateTime]) / 15 * 15, 0)
  ) AS Dates
  INNER JOIN Users AS Users ON Users.ID = Dates.ID
WHERE Users.TypeID = 1
  AND NOT EXISTS (
    SELECT TOP 1 1
    FROM
      (
        SELECT MIN(ID) AS ID, UserID, 
          DATEADD(minute, DATEDIFF(minute,0,[DateTime]) / 15 * 15, 0) AS [DateTime]
        FROM Users
        GROUP BY UserID, DATEADD(minute, DATEDIFF(minute,0,[DateTime]) / 15 * 15, 0)
      ) AS Dates2
      INNER JOIN Users AS U2 ON U2.ID = Dates2.ID
    WHERE U2.ID <> Users.ID 
      AND U2.UserID = Users.UserID 
      AND U2.[DateTime] BETWEEN DATEADD(MI, -15, Users.[DateTime]) AND Users.[DateTime] 
      AND U2.TypeID = 1
  )
ORDER BY Users.DateTime

If this doesn't work please post more sample data so that I can see what is missing.

Edit2 same as directly above but just using CTE now instead for improved readability and help improve maintainability, also I improved it to highlighted where you would also restrict the Dates table by whatever DateTime range that you would be restricting to the main query:

WITH Dates(ID, UserID, [DateTime])
AS
(
  SELECT MIN(ID) AS ID, UserID, 
    DATEADD(minute, DATEDIFF(minute,0,[DateTime]) / 15 * 15, 0) AS [DateTime]
  FROM Users
  WHERE Users.TypeID = 1 
  --AND Users.[DateTime] BETWEEN @StartDateTime AND @EndDateTime
  GROUP BY UserID, DATEADD(minute, DATEDIFF(minute,0,[DateTime]) / 15 * 15, 0)
)

SELECT Users.ID, Users.UserID, Users.[DateTime], Users.TypeID 
FROM Dates
  INNER JOIN Users ON Users.ID = Dates.ID
WHERE Users.TypeID = 1 
  --AND Users.[DateTime] BETWEEN @StartDateTime AND @EndDateTime
  AND NOT EXISTS (
    SELECT TOP 1 1
    FROM Dates AS Dates2
      INNER JOIN Users AS U2 ON U2.ID = Dates2.ID
    WHERE U2.ID <> Users.ID 
      AND U2.UserID = Users.UserID 
      AND U2.[DateTime] BETWEEN DATEADD(MI, -15, Users.[DateTime]) AND Users.[DateTime] 
      AND U2.TypeID = 1
  )
ORDER BY Users.DateTime

Also as a performance note, whenever dealing with something that might end up being recursive like this potentially could be (from other answers), you should straight away be considering if you are able to restrict the main query by a date range in general even if it's a whole year or longer range

4
  • This won't work. If the time spans are every minute or say 10:00, 10:14, 10:28, 10:42 etc the existence of a row in the table with a less than 15 minutes gap will block all but the first row from making it into the output. Sep 4, 2011 at 13:59
  • As I had first pointed out, the question wasn't specific if it needed to show one every 15mins or only show those records which "15 min has passed since the last record for the specific userID." as mentioned in the OP. I have now updated my answer to suit the additional requirement of omitting records that have "less than 15minute gap".
    – Seph
    Sep 5, 2011 at 8:22
  • @Martin I had a half written comment but was called to a meeting
    – Seph
    Sep 5, 2011 at 9:29
  • @Seph - It still doesn't work for the case I pointed out in my first comment. See this online demo data.stackexchange.com/stackoverflow/q/111706 Sep 5, 2011 at 9:46
0

You can use a recursive CTE for this though I would also evaluate a cursor if the result set is at all large as it may work out more efficient.

I've left out the ID column in my answer. If you really need it it would be possible to add it. It just makes the anchor part of the recursive CTE a bit more unwieldy.

DECLARE @T TABLE
(
ID INT PRIMARY KEY,
UserID INT,
[DateTime] DateTime,
TypeID INT
)
INSERT INTO @T
SELECT 1,1,'20100101 10:00:00', 1 union all
SELECT 2,2,'20100101 10:01:50', 1 union all
SELECT 3,1,'20100101 10:02:50', 1 union all
SELECT 4,1,'20100101 10:03:50', 1 union all
SELECT 5,1,'20100101 11:00:00', 1 union all
SELECT 6,2,'20100101 11:00:50', 1;


WITH RecursiveCTE
     AS (SELECT UserID,
                MIN([DateTime]) As [DateTime],
                1               AS TypeID
         FROM   @T
         WHERE  TypeID = 1
         GROUP  BY UserID
         UNION ALL
         SELECT UserID,
                [DateTime],
                TypeID
         FROM   (
                --Can't use TOP directly
                SELECT T.*,
                       rn = ROW_NUMBER() OVER (PARTITION BY T.UserID ORDER BY
                            T.[DateTime])
                 FROM   @T T
                        JOIN RecursiveCTE R
                          ON R.UserID = T.UserID
                             AND T.[DateTime] >=
                                 DATEADD(MINUTE, 15, R.[DateTime])) R
         WHERE  R.rn = 1)

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