Hi, I am working on web development project. There I am using this awesome DB. Let me tell you first the schema that I am having associated the problem.
I am having a table *users* - which has many fields. Out of them, the one I need here is *gender*. This column can have value "f"/"m"/"n". I have a table called *measures*. This table contains all possible answers of questions lies in the table called *daily_actions*. It has a foreign key columns as *daily_action_id*. I have a table called *daily_actions*. It has a field *question* and several other fields too. I have a table called *daily_action_answers*. It has foreign keys called "user_id", "daily_action_id" and "measure_id". Another field is *value* and "day". *day* is a _date_ field. SELECT users.gender,count(*) as participant,avg(daily_action_answers.value) as value FROM "users" INNER JOIN "daily_action_answers" ON "daily_action_answers"."user_id" = "users"."id" INNER JOIN "measures" ON "measures"."id" = "daily_action_answers"."measure_id" WHERE (((daily_action_answers.day between now() and <last_date_of_year>) and daily_action_answers.daily_action_id = 1)) GROUP BY users.gender, measures.option This is producing the below gender | participants | value n 2 12 n 1 3 m 1 4 m 4 12 f 3 23 f 4 15 Here n.m,f it comes 2 times, because the possible answer is 2. That's the problem with my current query. I don't understand which average value for which answer. Can we make the output as below ? gender participants answer1_avg answer2_avg n 3 12 3 m 5 4 12 f 7 15 23 Please let me know if you need any more information on this ? ================ Regards, Arup Rakshit ================ Debugging is twice as hard as writing the code in the first place. Therefore, if you write the code as cleverly as possible, you are, by definition, not smart enough to debug it. --Brian Kernighan -- Sent via pgsql-general mailing list (pgsql-general@postgresql.org) To make changes to your subscription: http://www.postgresql.org/mailpref/pgsql-general