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On Wed, Jun 08, 2005 at 13:56:36 +0200, Alain <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > > In fact, these are results of analyses. For one patient and one type of > meseare, I can have results at different dates and I need to follow the > differences between dates. So, if I have 5 records for one person, I'll > have 4 values of differences (record2-rec1, rec3-rec2, rec4-rec3, > rec5-rec4). Problem is to create the pairs from the records I have. I > can do it with an algorithm. But a query - if possible - returning the > number of days and the differences between the values would be nicer. This is actually easier. You can write a subquery that gets the row that has the greatest date less than the current date. With an index on Num and the date column it shouldn't be too slow. Below is an example test script and the output. This relies on Postgres supprting ORDER BY in subselects which isn't standard SQL. You can do this with standard SQL but that will require getting the max value of day less than the day in the current record with a matching num and then joining that result back to test to get the corresponding value. DROP TABLE test; CREATE TABLE test ( id SERIAL PRIMARY KEY, num INT NOT NULL, day DATE NOT NULL, value INT NOT NULL, UNIQUE (num, day) ); INSERT INTO test (num, day, value) VALUES (10, '2005-01-01', 50); INSERT INTO test (num, day, value) VALUES (10, '2005-05-31', 60); INSERT INTO test (num, day, value) VALUES (25, '2005-02-02', 55); INSERT INTO test (num, day, value) VALUES (25, '2005-03-15', 43); INSERT INTO test (num, day, value) VALUES (25, '2005-05-28', 62); SELECT num, day, value, value - (SELECT value FROM test WHERE num = a.num AND day < a.day ORDER BY num DESC, day DESC LIMIT 1) FROM test a WHERE (SELECT value FROM test WHERE num = a.num AND day < a.day ORDER BY num DESC, day DESC LIMIT 1) IS NOT NULL ORDER BY num, day ; bruno=> \i test.sql DROP TABLE psql:test.sql:8: NOTICE: CREATE TABLE will create implicit sequence "test_id_seq" for serial column "test.id" psql:test.sql:8: NOTICE: CREATE TABLE / PRIMARY KEY will create implicit index "test_pkey" for table "test" psql:test.sql:8: NOTICE: CREATE TABLE / UNIQUE will create implicit index "test_num_key" for table "test" CREATE TABLE INSERT 0 1 INSERT 0 1 INSERT 0 1 INSERT 0 1 INSERT 0 1 num | day | value | ?column? -----+------------+-------+---------- 10 | 2005-05-31 | 60 | 10 25 | 2005-03-15 | 43 | -12 25 | 2005-05-28 | 62 | 19 (3 rows) ---------------------------(end of broadcast)--------------------------- TIP 8: explain analyze is your friend