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In this example, I am collecting some engine data on a car.

Variables
--------------------------------------
id  | name
--------------------------------------
1     Headlights On 
2     Tire Pressure
3     Speed
4     Engine Runtime in Seconds
...


Values
--------------------------------------
id  |  var_id  | value  | time
--------------------------------------
1      1          1       2013-05-28 16:42:00.100
2      1          0       2013-05-28 16:42:22.150
3      2          32.0    2013-05-28 16:42:22.153
4      3          65      2013-05-28 16:42:22.155
...

I want to write a query that returns a result set something like the following:

Input: 1,2,3


Time                | Headlights On | Tire Pressure | Speed
---------------------------------------------------------------
2013-05-28 16:42:00   1                                  
2013-05-28 16:42:22   0               32              65

Being able to modify the query to include only results for a given set of variables and at a specified interval say (1 second, 1 minute or 5 minutes) are also really important for my use case.

How do you write a query in T-SQL that will return a time-aggregated multi column result set at a specific interval?

2
  • Righting a query that returns a "time-aggregated multi-column result set at a specific interval" is not a problem. Writing a query that has variable column names is a problem. Doing what you want requires dynamic SQL, because the column names are stored in a separate table. Is that really a requirement? Jun 3, 2013 at 21:17
  • Figured it might. I could generate a multi column table from the result set with a client application, but I didn't want to go there yet as I haven't started working on my client application yet. Just trying to get a better sense of whats in the database while I test my little OBD reader device.
    – Chris G.
    Jun 3, 2013 at 21:42

2 Answers 2

1

1 minute aggregate:

SELECT {edit: aggregate functions over fields here} FROM Values WHERE {blah} GROUP BY DATEPART (minute, time);

5 minute aggregate:

SELECT {edit: aggregate functions over fields here} FROM Values WHERE {blah} GROUP BY
  DATEPART(YEAR, time),
  DATEPART(MONTH, time),
  DATEPART(DAY, time),
  DATEPART(HOUR, time),
  (DATEPART(MINUTE, time) / 5);

For the reason this latter part is so convoluded, please see the SO post here: How to group time by hour or by 10 minutes .

Edit 1: For the part "include only results for a given set of variables", my interpretation is that you want to to isolate Values with var_id being within a specified set. If you can rely on the variable numbers/meanings not changing, the common SQL solution is the IN keyword (http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/ms177682.aspx).

This is what you would put into the WHERE clause above, e.g.

... WHERE var_id IN (2, 4) ...

If you can't rely on knowing the variable numbers but are certain about their names, you can replace the set by a sub-query, e.g.:

... WHERE var_id IN (SELECT id FROM Variables WHERE name IN ('Tire Pressure','Headlights On')) ...

The alternative interpretation is that you actually want to aggregate based on the variable ids as well. In this case, you'll have to include the var_id in your GROUP BY clause.

To make the results more crosstab-like, I guess you'll want to order by time aggregate that you're using. Hope that helps more.

11
  • This tells me how to set up a time interval, thanks for the link in the post. It's helpful. I still don't know how to set up the crosstab-like result set in my question, though. It's not as simple as WHERE {blah}, I think.
    – Chris G.
    Jun 3, 2013 at 19:44
  • 1
    Perhaps my edit will help. Still not sure if my interpretation of what you're looking for is correct, though. Jun 3, 2013 at 20:01
  • This got me in the right direction. Still learning MSSQL. This SQL query gives me an error. Since we're grouping by time, the SELECT * will yield the 'is not contained in aggregate function` error. Thing is, I don't want to contain it... max(), min(), etc are not relevant here - I just want the actual value for the row with that time.
    – Chris G.
    Jun 4, 2013 at 13:20
  • 1
    Yes, that's true, you're absolutely right. You'll need to use some aggregate functions on each field you want except for the one's you're aggregating on, i.e. AVG(value), MIN(var_id) and the like. The rows won't have direct correspondence to the rows in the original table, so it doesn't make much sense to aggregate the "id" column. Jun 4, 2013 at 13:30
  • 1
    I'm guessing there was no data past 13:20 at the time of query, which would mean that the 13:19 aggregate is actually for 13:15, 13:16, 13:17, 13:18, and 13:19. The 13:14 chunk seems also correct unless I'm missing something, and the 13:20 is just the truncated time segment with one minute only. Jun 4, 2013 at 14:13
1

Try

SELECT
    VehicleID
    , Case WHEN Name = 'Headlights on' THEN 1
     Else 0 END ' as [Headlights on]
    , Case WHEN Name = 'Tyre pressure' THEN Value
     Else CAST( NULL AS REAL) END ' as [Tyre pressure]
 , DateName(Year, DateField) [year ]
FROM
   Table

ETC

Then agrregate as required

SELECT
      VehicleID
      , SUM([Headlights on]) SUM([Headlights on],
FROM 
(
QUery above

) S
GROUP BY
VehicleID
, [Year]
2
  • This kind of gave me some kind of clue but isn't really what I'm looking for. Looking at the tables in my example, I'm recording values over time for a set of variables. I don't want to sum up the truthfulness of Headlights_On for a time period, I want to display the values of a provided set of variables in a crosstab-like format over a time interval.
    – Chris G.
    Jun 3, 2013 at 19:43
  • Well there are quite a few agregate functions, if you want 1 where its true (even multiple times) then just use MAX(binary_column) instead or MAX(NumericColumnEgTyrePressure). Provided you group by (VEhicleId and TimePeriod) then this is exactly what you ask for as I understand your question
    – Ian P
    Jun 4, 2013 at 8:22

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