3

I have data that looks like

NBR  ID  DT
1    1   01-DEC-01 
1    2   01-JAN-01
2    3   01-JAN-01
2    4   O2-JAN-01

I want to get just one row for each NBR, with the earliest date. So I want the result to be

NBR  ID  DT
1    2   01-JAN-01
2    3   01-JAN-01

However, I can't use LIMIT because I'm using Oracle. I tried the following but its not giving the result I expect

select DISTINCT NBR, ID, DT
from tablename
group by NBR, ID, DT
order by DT

EDIT: This is NOT a duplicate of that link because I am grouping by NBR. I want one row for each distinct NBR.

2

4 Answers 4

4

The solution has nothing to do with limit or order by, Oracle or not. you want to use the row_number analytic function to solve this easily:

select nbr, id, dt
  from (select nbr, id, dt,
               row_number() over (partition by nbr order by dt) as rn
          from tbl)
 where rn = 1
3

You can also use the FIRST analytic function:

select NBR,
  min(ID) keep (dense_rank first order by DT) as ID,
  min(DT) keep (dense_rank first order by DT) as DT
from tablename
group by NBR
order by DT;

       NBR         ID DT                
---------- ---------- -------------------
         2          3 2001-01-01 00:00:00
         1          2 2001-01-01 00:00:00
2

You can use KEEP ( DENSE_RANK FIRST ...) with an aggregate function:

Oracle Setup:

CREATE TABLE table_name ( NBR, ID, DT ) AS
SELECT 1, 1, DATE '2001-12-01' FROM DUAL UNION ALL 
SELECT 1, 2, DATE '2001-01-01' FROM DUAL UNION ALL
SELECT 2, 3, DATE '2001-01-01' FROM DUAL UNION ALL
SELECT 2, 4, DATE '2001-01-02' FROM DUAL;

Query:

SELECT NBR,
       MAX( ID ) KEEP ( DENSE_RANK FIRST ORDER BY DT ) AS ID,
       MIN( DT ) AS DT
FROM   table_name
GROUP BY NBR;

Output:

       NBR         ID DT                
---------- ---------- -------------------
         1          2 2001-01-01 00:00:00 
         2          3 2001-01-01 00:00:00 
0
SELECT t.*
FROM
    tablename t
    INNER JOIN 
    (
       SELECT
          NBR
          ,MIN(DT) AS DT
       FROM
          tablename
       GROUP BY
          NBR
    ) g
    ON t.NBR = g.NBR
    AND t.DT = g.DT

I love the window funtions and ctes as much as everyone else on this site. Here is an old school way not using those for fun. note if there is duplicate earliest DT for NBR you will get multiple rows for that NBR

In case of having duplicate earliest DT per NBR you can do yet another level of aggregation so this is getting even crazier. On the next level you get the min(ID) and then relate it back to the table. If window functions are an option they really are a better choice.........

SELECT t1.*
FROM
    tablename t1
    INNER JOIN 
       (
        SELECT t.NBR, MIN(t.ID) AS ID
        FROM
             tablename t2
             INNER JOIN 
             (
                SELECT
                  NBR
                  ,MIN(DT) AS DT
                FROM
                  tablename t3
                GROUP BY
                  NBR
             ) g
             ON t.NBR = g.NBR
             AND t.DT = g.DT
        GROUP BY
          t.NBR
       ) m
    ON t1.NBR = m.NBR
    AND t1.ID = m.ID
7
  • But I only want it to return one row if there is a duplicate earlier DT for NBR Jun 16, 2016 at 21:19
  • the row_number window function is the best for that is that not an option. how would you choose which record if they are duplicate the lowest id?
    – Matt
    Jun 16, 2016 at 21:22
  • @user6347191 look at the bottom of my answer if you really don't want to do this via window functions and you will see away to get only 1 record arbitrarily when duplicate earliest DT exists per NBR
    – Matt
    Jun 16, 2016 at 21:29
  • 2
    DT = MIN(DT) is invalid SQL. Also: Oracle was actually the first DBMS to support window functions. It has had it since version 8
    – user330315
    Jun 16, 2016 at 21:29
  • @a_horse_with_no_name thanks for the tip I don't write oracle syntax basically ever, I changed to min(id) as id and min(dt) as dt. I just writing the crazy answer because the user seems to have an aversion to window functions but I am glad to know about oracle being first to support!
    – Matt
    Jun 16, 2016 at 21:37

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