Collin, I have a similar circumstance in one of my own apps. I operate under the simple presumption that the unique_id is sequential and thus the record with the highest unique_id is the most recent entry. In that case I use a query such as
select * from broadcast_history where unique_id in ( select broadcast_id, max(unique_id) from broadcast_history group by broadcast_id) which permits me to examine the entire record which is necessary in my situation. Good luck Mark On Thu, 2006-06-01 at 10:43 -0700, Collin Peters wrote: > I am having some serious mental block here. Here is the abstract > version of my problem. I have a table like this: > > unique_id (PK) broadcast_id date_sent status > 1 1 2005-04-04 30 > 2 1 2005-04-01 30 > 3 1 2005-05-20 10 > 4 2 2005-05-29 30 > > So it is a table that stores broadcasts including the broadcast_id, > the date sent, and the status of the broadcast. > > What I would like to do is simply get the last date_sent and it's > status for every broadcast. I can't do a GROUP BY because I can't put > an aggregate on the status column. > > SELECT MAX(date_sent), status > FROM broadcast_history > GROUP BY broadcast_id > > How do I get the status for the most recent date_sent using GROUP BY? > > DISTINCT also doesn't work > > SELECT DISTINCT ON (email_broadcast_id) * > FROM email_broadcast_history > ORDER BY date_sent > > As you have to have the DISTINCT fields matching the ORDER BY fields. > I have to ORDER BY date_sent, but I can't do a DISTINCT on date_sent > > I keep thinking am I missing something. Does anybody have any ideas? > > ---------------------------(end of broadcast)--------------------------- > TIP 2: Don't 'kill -9' the postmaster ---------------------------(end of broadcast)--------------------------- TIP 9: In versions below 8.0, the planner will ignore your desire to choose an index scan if your joining column's datatypes do not match