I have a query that joins a couple of tables and produces a lot of rows, in a situation where I only wish to see one row per user. I have solved the "only one user" problem by using group by user.id, however, I'm noticing that now for each user I get the values from the joined table that represent the first entry (rather than the last).
so in other words
user:
id | phone
item:
id | user_id | timestamp
my intention is to join these tables and select the latest item (based on timestamp, or item.id desc) but to only get one item per user (rather than see all the items that each user has). group by user.id solves the problem of giving me just one item per user, but they always turn up with the first item that has the lowest item.id, whereas I want the most recent one.
Is there a better way to achieve this... I was initially noodling with distinct but that doesn't seem to do the trick.
TIA
[EDIT]
In response to Jocelin's question below:
select user.id, item.timestamp from item join user on user.id = item.user_id order by user.id
select user.id, item.timestamp from item join user on user.id = item.user_id order by user.idI can't paste the actual query cause it's really convoluted. I'm stripping it down to its essentials here. – Dr.Dredel Aug 22 '12 at 23:31