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I'm trying to delete some conflicting date related to the times, this is a table of start times and stop times, and I want to write a query to delete overlapping data, in this case I would want to delete 13:00 row and 13:30 row(rows 6/7) because those times are already covered with the 12:00 to 14:00 row(rows 3/4). All the rows where VALUE_ENUM are 1 are start times and all the rows where VALUE_ENUM are 0 are stop times.

Here is an example of what the data in my table looks like:

SITE_ID ------- DEV_ID ------- SCHEDULE_TIME ------- VALUE_ENUM
---------------------------------------------------------------
1               3000           09:30:00              1
1               3000           11:30:00              0
1               3000           12:00:00              1
1               3000           14:00:00              0
1               3000           13:00:00              1
1               3000           13:30:00              0
1               3000           16:30:00              1
1               3000           18:30:00              0
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  • If you ordered the query by schedule_time, would two sequential value_enum values of 1 indicated an overlap?
    – Philip
    Sep 19, 2011 at 19:27
  • @Philip yes they would indicate an overlap
    – Beef
    Sep 19, 2011 at 19:39
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    How do you order your rows? I mean, how do you know that 14:00 comes before 13:00? Sep 19, 2011 at 20:15
  • They get inserted in order of start time so it would insert a start time and its corresponding end time, so it gets 12:00 and 14:00 at the same time and inserts one has the first value and then the 14:00. It gets all the times from a text file that is ordered by start time.
    – Beef
    Sep 19, 2011 at 20:30
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    You do realize that SQL is inherently un-ordered, right? You cannot rely on insert-order to sort your data - there is no garuantee that it's actually stored that way, much less that it's going to be returned to you in that order. Unless you explicitly state a column to order by, the rows are returned in a random order (for implementation reasons, this is often, but NOT garuanteed, in insertion order). If it's important, specify something that will be unique and ordered per insertion - like an id column... Sep 19, 2011 at 20:55

2 Answers 2

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It seems you want to delete a row when its schedule_time is less than the previous row. But how do your order the rows? Is there another column? Otherwise, once you delete the next insert will mostly likely be in that position and the next time you will end up deleting lot of rows wrongly.

Not sure how this can be done in a single sql statement but the procedural algorithm is straightforward -- initialize last_schedule_time to null and then on every row compare; delete if less or assign last_schedule_time to current.

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  • I actually have 2 questions posted about this the other goes into a lot more details so I posted a more simple version to see if I would get better help, here is the other version stackoverflow.com/questions/7474411/…
    – Beef
    Sep 19, 2011 at 19:08
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    agree. from my side, I could say, all rows between 1st row and last row should be deleted, because they are overlapped. There must be some other criteria that he forgot mentioning.
    – Kent
    Sep 19, 2011 at 19:11
  • they are not all over lapped though for this specific system it should be on from 9:30 to 11:30 then off and then back on from 12:00 to 14:00 and then off and then on again from 16:30 to 18:30 and then off again
    – Beef
    Sep 19, 2011 at 19:33
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Thanks for the help, but I was able to solve the answer by setting previous times for specific systems to temp variables and then did a comparison with the next times to see if they fell between the temp times, and if they did I just skipped the insert entirely, once again Thank you for the input and suggestions.

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