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my mysql table along with other fields has a time stamp field where i store the unix timestamps(ones like 13076829212). i want to make an ajax request which will fetch the newly added rows ordered by timestamp in descending order(fetch most recent) so i send the last row number to fire a query like this

select id, name from tablename order by timestamp desc limit 30, 125273733849448

i want to fetch all the rows in the most recent sequence starting from the last row number that was fetched.

What the above query is doing is fetching random records. i know my query logic is somewhere wrong, please help. thanks.

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  • what is your idea? when you use limit x,y then x is starting point and y is how many records will be shown. So this query will actually skip first 30 results(with DESC order). Is that desirable? Feb 18, 2013 at 12:45
  • idea is to fetch all the rows added after my last result set was fetched. thats why y is a large number to show all the records
    – coder101
    Feb 18, 2013 at 12:47

1 Answer 1

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Updated answer after discussions:

Now that I understand the question a bit better I think you should use:

SELECT id, name, timestamp FROM tablename WHERE timestamp > [saved timestamp] ORDER BY timestamp DESC

Where [saved timestamp] would be replaced by the latest timestamp in the initial query.

If the initial query also uses ORDER BY timestamp DESC you will know that the latest timestamp is always in the first row so it can easily be saved.


Original answer:

If I understood this correctly 30 would be the id of the last row you fetched and id is incrementing. Then this should do it:

SELECT id, name FROM tablename WHERE id > 30 ORDER BY timestamp DESC
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  • actualy 30 is the number of the last row, i mean 30th is the last row. should i do it using last id and not by the count of the row? what i want to do is fetch newly added rows using long polling
    – coder101
    Feb 18, 2013 at 12:38
  • if i should be using last id, this sparks a new problem as initially the first query to generate a list is also in descending order so how will i be able to fetch the last id inside the resultset while looping. should i use the max(id)?
    – coder101
    Feb 18, 2013 at 12:41
  • Perhaps you can save the last timestamp instead?
    – ellak
    Feb 18, 2013 at 12:45
  • but then again to store the last timestamp, i will have to search for the highest timestamp value when i loop through the initial result. can i fire two queries, one for the looping and one just to fetch the highest timestamp or id value(using max) and then send that value and at the time of long polling use the query which u suggested.
    – coder101
    Feb 18, 2013 at 12:50
  • if you order by timestamp in the initial query then you will know where the highest timestamp value is.
    – ellak
    Feb 18, 2013 at 12:53

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