Quoting [EMAIL PROTECTED]: > I have a simple query with a pretty high cost (EXPLAIN ...), and I'm > wondering if I can somehow trim it. > > Query (shows the last 7 dates): > > => SELECT DISTINCT date_part('year', uu.add_date), > date_part('month', > uu.add_date), date_part('day', uu.add_date) FROM user_url uu > WHERE > uu.user_id=1 ORDER BY date_part('year', uu.add_date) DESC, > date_part('month', uu.add_date) DESC, date_part('day', > uu.add_date) > DESC LIMIT 7; > > QUERY PLAN: > --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- > Limit (cost=4510.14..4522.93 rows=2 width=8) (actual > time=19.924..20.160 rows=7 loops=1) > -> Unique (cost=4510.14..4522.93 rows=2 width=8) (actual > time=19.919..20.139 rows=7 loops=1) > -> Sort (cost=4510.14..4513.34 rows=1279 width=8) (actual > time=19.915..20.004 rows=78 loops=1) > Sort Key: date_part('year'::text, add_date), > date_part('month'::text, add_date), date_part('day'::text, add_date) > -> Index Scan using foo on user_url uu > (cost=0.00..4444.14 rows=1279 width=8) (actual time=0.095..14.761 > rows=1225 loops=1) > Index Cond: (user_id = 1) > Total runtime: 20.313 ms > (7 rows) > > > It looks like the cost is all in ORDER BY, and if I remove ORDER BY > the > execution time goes from 20-90 ms to less than 1 ms. > > I do need the 7 most recent add_dates. Is there a more efficient > way > of grabbing them? The query analyzer is using the sort to detect and return distinct values, as well. So there's not much point in trying to remove it.
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