> Also, I produced a second query using PostgreSQL: > select a.id_i, a.ir_id, a.test, a.stamp > from test a > join > ( > select max(stamp) as mstamp, id_i > from test > group by id_i > ) b > on a.stamp = b.mstamp > where a.test = false > ; > -- result > id_i | ir_id | test | stamp > ------+-------+------+--------------------- > 4 | 8 | f | 2006-06-05 08:00:00
I found this query produced the same result. It is a list slower than the first with my small dataset. but maybe it will improve for larger datasets? select t1.id_i, t1.ir_id, t1.test, t1.stamp, t1.inttest from test as t1 where t1.stamp = ( select max(T2.stamp) from test as t2 where t2.id_i = t1.id_i) and t1.test = 'f'; Regards, Richard Broersma Jr. ---------------------------(end of broadcast)--------------------------- TIP 5: don't forget to increase your free space map settings