The relevant part of my database schema looks like this (Ruby on Rails migration code, but should be easy to read):
create_table "team_memberships" do |t|
t.integer "team_id"
t.integer "user_id"
end
create_table "users" do |t|
t.integer "id"
t.string "slug"
end
create_table "performance_points" do |t|
t.integer "id"
t.integer "user_id",
t.date "date",
t.integer "points",
t.integer "team_id"
end
I want a query that returns a list of users sorted by the total amount of performance points they have received since a certain date. Note that one "performance_points" row does not equal one point, we need to sum the "points"
The query I have so far looks like this:
SELECT u.id, u.slug, SUM(pp.points) AS total
FROM users u
JOIN performance_points pp ON pp.user_id = u.id
JOIN team_memberships tm ON tm.team_id = pp.team_id AND tm.user_id = pp.user_id
WHERE (pp.date > '2015-08-02 13:57:14.042221')
GROUP BY pp.id, u.id
ORDER BY total DESC
LIMIT 50
The first three results are:
"id","slug","total"
32369,"andreas-jensen-9de10dec-0f88-427f-b135-62cebea611c8",245
23752,"kenneth-kjaerstad",95
34179,"marius-mork-rydal",93
To check that results are correct I count the points for each user. However the second one seems to be wrong. I run this query with Kenneth's id:
SELECT SUM(performance_points.points)
FROM performance_points
WHERE performance_points.user_id = 23752
AND (date > '2015-08-02 13:57:14.042221')
I get: 84
. Looking at all Kenneth's performance points with:
SELECT performance_points.points
FROM performance_points
WHERE performance_points.user_id = 23752
AND (date > '2015-08-02 13:57:14.042221')
We get:
"points"
-10
1
-2
95
-10 + 1 - 2 + 95 is indeed 84 so I dunno whats going on with the first query. Why is the total 95?
I'm running PostgreSQL version 9.3.5
select ...
toselect *
and removegroup by
clause and, I am sure, you will find the problem.