2

I have the following table:

RowId, UserId, Date
1, 1, 1/1/01
2, 1, 2/1/01
3, 2, 5/1/01
4, 1, 3/1/01
5, 2, 9/1/01

I want to get the latest records based on date and per UserId but as a part of the following query (due to a reason I cannot change this query as this is auto generated by a tool but I can write pass any thing starting with AND...):

SELECT RowId, UserId, Date
FROM MyTable
WHERE 1 = 1
AND ( 

// everything which needs to be done goes here . . .

)

I have tried similar query, but get an error:

Only one expression can be specified in the select list when the subquery is not introduced with EXISTS.

EDIT: Database is Sql Server 2008

3
  • 3
    Which database server are you using? Nov 10, 2013 at 21:34
  • 1
    per UserID means that you want to group by UserID. How do you want to group with a Where clause only? Nov 10, 2013 at 21:37
  • Database is sql server 2008, yes i want to group by user_id, can be done in any way.
    – Umair
    Nov 10, 2013 at 21:51

4 Answers 4

3

You could use a NOT EXISTS condition:

SELECT RowId, UserId, Date
FROM MyTable
WHERE 1 = 1
AND NOT EXISTS (
  SELECT *
  FROM MyTable AS t
  WHERE t.UserId = MyTable.UserId
    AND t.Date > MyTable.Date
)
;

Note that if a user has more than one row with the same latest Date value, the query will return all such entries. If necessary, you can modify the subquery's condition slightly to make sure only one row is returned:

  WHERE t.UserId = MyTable.UserId
    AND (t.Date > MyTable.Date
      OR t.Date = MyTable.Date AND t.RowId > MyTable.RowId
    )

With the above condition, if two or more rows with the same Date exist for the same user, the one with the greater RowId value will be returned.

5
  • I like this, short and readable. +1 However, if there are multiple records with a max-date for one UserID and OP wants only one row... Nov 10, 2013 at 22:08
  • @TimSchmelter: That is a good point, thanks. I'll add a note on that and a workaround.
    – Andriy M
    Nov 10, 2013 at 22:14
  • Or in subquery we can use TOP 1 with order by Date in DESC order, so in that case will get the latest record by date.
    – Umair
    Nov 11, 2013 at 9:15
  • @Umair: I am not sure I understand what subquery you are talking about but if you mean the one used in my answer, it would certainly not work that way. TOP n, whether with or without ORDER BY, would not affect the results of an EXISTS subquery in any way.
    – Andriy M
    Nov 11, 2013 at 9:48
  • I was thinking to add in SELECT * FROM MyTable AS t WHERE t.UserId = MyTable.UserId AND t.Date > MyTable.Date, but yes the where query you mentioned does work for me.
    – Umair
    Nov 11, 2013 at 10:32
1

Assuming you have the ability to modify anything within the AND clause you can do a query like this if you are using TSQL

SELECT RowId, UserId, [Date]
FROM @myTable
WHERE 1 = 1
AND ( 
    RowId IN (
            SELECT D.RowId
            FROM (
                SELECT DISTINCT MAX(RowId) AS RowId, UserId, MAX([Date]) AS [Date]
                FROM @myTable
                GROUP BY UserId
        ) AS D
    )
)
1

Try:

SELECT RowId, UserId, Date
FROM MyTable
WHERE 1 = 1
AND EXISTS
(SELECT 1
 FROM (SELECT UserId, MAX(Date) MaxDate
       FROM MyTable
       GROUP BY UserId) m
 WHERE m.UserId = MyTable.UserId and m.MaxDate = MyTable.Date)

SQLFiddle here.

3
  • If there are multiple records with a max-date for one UserID and OP wants only one row, how could you modify this query? sqlfiddle.com/#!6/84b97/1/0 Nov 10, 2013 at 22:12
  • @TimSchmelter: The user said "I want to get the latest records" - note the use of the plural; I understand this to mean that if there are multiple records for the latest date for the same user, then OP wants all of them. Of course, I could be wrong, in which case I would need to know whether RowId, or some other column, could be used to determine which is the latest; if so, I would remove the grouping, add RowId to the inner query and change the MAX(Date) to be a windowed rownumber, then change the EXISTS join to be on rownumber=1 and on RowID - eg: sqlfiddle.com/#!6/84b97/6
    – user359040
    Nov 11, 2013 at 6:32
  • The plural would be correct also with one record per UserId. However, the row_number approach works fine. But i would remove the second order by RowId if it spent matter because you could replace it with Dense_Rank easily to get the "multi-row" behaviour. Nov 11, 2013 at 7:33
1

Assuming that RowID is an identity column:

SELECT t1.RowId, t1.UserId, t1.Date
FROM MyTable t1
WHERE 1 = 1
AND t1.RowID IN ( 

    SELECT TOP 1 t2.RowID 
    FROM MyTable t2
    WHERE  t1.UserId = t2.UserId
    AND    t2.Date = (SELECT MAX(t3.Date) FROM MyTable t3
                      WHERE t2.UserID = t3.UserId)

)

Demo

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