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I have a table countries, and I want to display all the neighbouring countries to Sweden, and I got two problems.

My code is like this:

SELECT b.cntry_name
FROM countries as a
JOIN countries as b
ON ST_Distance(a.the_geom,b.the_geom)<10000
WHERE a.cntry_name='Sweden'
GROUP BY  b.cntry_name 

It returned a table looks like this:

enter image description here

I want to delete Sweden from this table, so I tried to use NOT EXISTS:

SELECT b.cntry_name
FROM countries as a
JOIN countries as b
ON ST_Distance(a.the_geom,b.the_geom)<10000
WHERE a.cntry_name='Sweden' AND NOT EXISTS(SELECT b.cntry_name FROM b WHERE b.cntry_name='Sweden')
GROUP BY b.cntry_name

However, this returned a blank webpage(I'm doing PostGIS online),which means there's something wrong in my code.

So the first question is, how can I delete the row Sweden after the selection?

Same thing happened when I tried to add countries.svg after b.cntry_name:

SELECT b.cntry_name,countries.svg
FROM countries as a
JOIN countries as b
ON ST_Distance(a.the_geom,b.the_geom)<10000
WHERE a.cntry_name='Sweden'
GROUP BY  b.cntry_name 

This also returned a blank webpage. Any tips where I went wrong when tried to display svg?

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  • Why ST_Distance(a.the_geom,b.the_geom)<10000?? Use ST_DWithin to allow it to use a spatial index, and make it much faster.
    – Mike T
    Feb 16, 2015 at 20:53
  • You can do this using ST_Touches, which will be more accurate than ST_Distance or ST_DWithin, both of which could give the wrong answer if you have a country 9999 m away that has no common border -- not the case with Sweden, but it could happen. Feb 18, 2015 at 7:18

4 Answers 4

3

No need for NOT EXISTS:

SELECT b.cntry_name
FROM countries as a
JOIN countries as b
ON ST_Distance(a.the_geom,b.the_geom)<10000
WHERE a.cntry_name='Sweden'
  AND a.cntry_name <> b.cntry_name
--GROUP BY  b.cntry_name -- should work without GROUP BY
3
  • In your query there's no table named countries as you renamed them to aliases a and b. According to Standard SQL the query should fail with some "unknown table countries" errror
    – dnoeth
    Feb 16, 2015 at 19:01
  • The distance query should be ST_DWithin(a.the_geom, b.the_geom, 10000)
    – Mike T
    Feb 16, 2015 at 20:52
  • @MikeTThanks for your tips,but ST_DWithin(a.the_geom, b.the_geom, 10000) doesn't work. Feb 17, 2015 at 9:25
1

I think this is all that would be necessary. NOT EXISTS is not necessary here:

SELECT b.cntry_name
  FROM countries as a
  JOIN countries as b
    ON ST_Distance(a.the_geom,b.the_geom) < 10000
   AND a.cntry_name != b.cntry_name
 WHERE a.cntry_name = 'Sweden'
 GROUP BY b.cntry_name

I think the GROUP BY at the end is not needed.

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1

skip your subquery:

SELECT b.cntry_name
FROM countries as a
JOIN countries as b
ON ST_Distance(a.the_geom,b.the_geom)<10000
   AND b.cntry_name <> 'Sweden'
WHERE a.cntry_name <> 'Sweden'
GROUP BY b.cntry_name

explanation:

your subquery always returns rows ( since table countries has data on Sweden ), thus the where condition can never be fulfilled.

you also had a syntax error in your subquery, when you only gave the alias b in the from clause instead of the table name.

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0

This is not the best way to find neighboring countries. There are places where borders are within 10km of each other, but the countries are not neighbors, so you would get false positives from the above. More correct, and shorter, would be to use ST_Touches.

SELECT b.cntry_name
FROM countries as a, countries as b
WHERE ST_Touches(a.the_geom, b.the_geom)
AND a.cntry_name = 'Sweden';

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