1

I have a table of user interactions on a web site and I need to calculate the average time between interactions of each user. To make it more simple to understand, here's some records of the table:

Table of user interactions

Where the first column is the user id and the second is the interaction time. The results that I need is the average time between interactions of each user. Example:

  • The user 12345 average interaction interval is 1 day

I've already tried to use window functions, but i couldn't get the average because PostgreSQL doesn't let me use GROUP BY or AVG on window functions, I could get the intervals using the following command, but couldn't group it based on the user id.

SELECT INTERACTION_DATE - LAG(INTERACTION_DATE ) OVER (ORDER BY INTERACTION_DATE ) 

So, I decided to create my own custom function and after that, create a custom aggregate function to do this, and use this function on a group by clause:

CREATE OR REPLACE FUNCTION DATE_INTERVAL(TIMESTAMP)  
     RETURNS TABLE (USER_INTERVALS INTERVAL) 
AS $$
  SELECT $1 - LAG($1) OVER (ORDER BY $1) 
$$
LANGUAGE SQL
IMMUTABLE;

But this function only return several rows with one column with null value.

Is there a better way to do this?

1
  • Yes, it has, but user interactions are not sequenced. A user X can interact between some user Y interactions. But the interaction_id is sequenced! May 18, 2018 at 12:45

2 Answers 2

3

You need to first calculate the difference between the interactions for each row (and user), then you can calculate the average on that:

select user_id, avg(interaction_time)
from (
   select user_id, 
          interaction_date - lag(interaction_date) over (partition by user_id order by interaction_date) as interaction_time
   from the_table
) t
group by user_id;
1
  • Minor typo: comma before 'order by'. Seems to do the trick after fixing. :) May 18, 2018 at 12:56
0

Encapsule your first query then compute the average:

SELECT AVG(InteractionTime) FROM (
    SELECT INTERACTION_DATE - LAG(INTERACTION_DATE ) OVER (ORDER BY INTERACTION_DATE ) AS InteractionTime
)

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.