On 9/9/07, Håkan Jacobsson <hakan.jacobsson99@bredband.net> wrote:
> Merlin,
>
> Its just about three columns - not any column. Two columns are
> varchars and the third is
> a date. The date column value is NULL for the rows for which
> I want to delete the duplicates.
getting ready to go on vacation :). The idea is you want to write a
query that pulls out the data you want to keep. If you have a table
with 6 fields, f1 though f6 and you only want one record with
identical values of f1, f2, f3, you might do:
begin;
create temp table scratch as
select f1, f2, f3, max(f4), max(f5), max(f6) from foo group by f1, f2, f3;
truncate foo;
insert into foo select * from scratch;
commit;
You can replace max() with any suitable aggregate you deem gets you
the best data out of the record. If you are feeling really clever,
you can write a custom aggregate for the record type (it's easier than
you think!)
merlin