2

I am trying to bring back a list of properties. Properties can have many "passes". I want to bring back a list of unique properties but if they have multiple passes, I want the one with the largest pass_id. This is what I have so far:

select * from passes
inner join properties on properties.prop_id = passes.prop_id
where pass_id NOT IN (select pass_id from queue where user_id = 1)

+---------+---------+---------+---------+------------------+--------------+-------+
| pass_id | prop_id | user_id | prop_id | full_street_name | house_number | zip   |
+---------+---------+---------+---------+------------------+--------------+-------+
|      18 |      21 |       1 |      21 |  N KEELER AVE    |         6200 | 60646 |
|      20 |      21 |       1 |      21 |  N KEELER AVE    |         6200 | 60646 |
|      21 |      21 |       1 |      21 |  N KEELER AVE    |         6200 | 60646 |
|      22 |      22 |       1 |      22 |  E CHESTNUT ST   |          111 | 60611 |
+---------+---------+---------+---------+------------------+--------------+-------+

I want it to return only pass_id 21 and 22 since 18 and 20 are duplicate properties of 21. Thanks in advance.

1
  • FYI the answer you accepted is a trivial answer that only works for one property. My answer works for any number of properties, and more particularly works for your query.
    – Bohemian
    Oct 19, 2012 at 19:06

3 Answers 3

0

try:

 Select * From passes p
 Where Pass_Id =
     (Select Max(pass_Id) From Passes
      Where Prop_Id = p.Prop_Id)
0

Because you're using mysql, you can use this mysql-only neat solution:

select * from (
    select * from passes
    inner join properties on properties.prop_id = passes.prop_id
    where pass_id NOT IN (select pass_id from queue where user_id = 1)
    order by pass_id desc) x
group by prop_id

This query is simply your original query but ordered by pass_id desc, then grouping by prop_id.

In every other database I know, this would cause an SQL syntax exception, because there are columns not being grouped-by that are not aggregated. However, in mysql, instead of giving an error, it returns the first row for each group. In this case, the first row is the largest pass_id because the data is ordered that way.

0

Try this?

Select * From passes p  
Where Pass_Id in
  (Select [Max] = MAX(Pass_ID) OVER(PARTITION BY Prop_Id) 
   From Passes) 

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.