8

By default data extracted by the GROUP BY clause is ordered as ascending. How to change it to descending.

4 Answers 4

12

You should use the derived tables on your SQL. For example if you want to pick up the most recent row for an specific activity you're attempt to use:

select * 
from activities 
group by id_customer 
order by creation_date

but it doesn't work. Try instead:

SELECT * 
FROM ( select * 
       from activities 
       order by creation_date desc ) sorted_list 
GROUP BY id_customer
9
+50

Add DESC to the GROUP BY clause, e.g. :

GROUP BY myDate DESC
8

As the MySQL documentation says,

SELECT * FROM foo GROUP BY bar

is equivalent to

SELECT * FROM foo GROUP BY bar ORDER BY bar

Default behaviour can not be changed, but you can use

SELECT * FROM foo GROUP BY bar ORDER BY bar DESC

without experiencing any speed penalties as the sorting will be performed on the grouped field anyway. By the way, when sorting is not important you can get (small) speed-up by using ORDER BY NULL.

1

ORDER BY foo DESC?

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