11

As far as I know mysql GROUP BY groups to the last record found.

Is there any solution to GROUP BY the first record?

I have setup the ORDER in SQL command and I need GROUP BY return the first record and not the last.

EDIT

Here is the Query

SELECT 
  DISTINCT(master.masterID),
  langData.*,
  master.* 
FROM master_table as master 
INNER JOIN lang_table as langData ON 
langData.masterID=master.masterID 
GROUP BY master.masterID 
ORDER BY 
CASE 
    WHEN langData.lang='currentLang' THEN 1 ELSE 999 END , 
    master.name desc LIMIT 0,10 

The query above select the masterID for multi language table and suppose to return FIRST the records in currentLang and order them by name AND THEN all other languages.

Don't ask me why I don't set the language in JOIN. This is the way to be done.

So everything works fine so far expect the scenario that I have a record with languages en and fr. If currentLang is en then based on

langData.lang='currentLang' THEN 1 ELSE 999 END

the en order is 1 and fr order is 999 and instead of getting the value of en I get the value of fr.

That's why I want to group to the first row.

3
  • I won't ask you why don't you set the language in the JOIN, rather I'll tell you that this way it will not work. An unaggregated expression in GROUP BY returns an arbitrary record from each group and is not supposed to be used if the values vary. You can return any record from master_table (they will all be the same within each group) but not from lang_table. There is no guarantee on which record will be returned, nada, niente. BTW, why do you have DISTINCT here, what's its purpose?
    – Quassnoi
    Mar 2, 2010 at 17:47
  • I am trying to achieve "give me first all records from current language order by name and then for all other languages order by name " Meaning : if current lang is EN then get all records for EN and then get all records for other langs.IF in lang table for one record has EN,FR return the EN value.IF in lang table EN does not exist return any other lang
    – ntan
    Mar 2, 2010 at 18:12
  • this is very easy to do with a JOIN like described here: explainextended.com/2009/08/10/fallback-language-names-mysql but for some strange reason (which you don't even want to be asked for) you are reluctant to use it.
    – Quassnoi
    Mar 2, 2010 at 22:28

2 Answers 2

12

I assume you are talking of something like

SELECT  *
FROM    mytable
GROUP BY
        column

You shouldn't use unaggregated expressions in GROUP BY unless they are all same within the group.

If you want to return the record holding the least value of an expression within a group, use this:

SELECT  mo.*
FROM    (
        SELECT  DISTINCT column
        FROM    mytable
        ) md
JOIN    mytable mo
ON      mo.id = 
        (
        SELECT  id
        FROM    mytable mi
        WHERE   mi.column = md.column
        ORDER BY
                mi.column, mi.someorder
        LIMIT 1
        )
0
0

Add LIMIT 1 to your query.

0

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