Hi all
I have a somewhat furry solution to a problem for which I think there might be
a better way to do it.
The table looks like this (simplified for the sake of this example):
drop table if exists test1;
create table test1(
id serial primary key,
key varchar,
username varchar,
value varchar
);
-- Insert test-data
insert into test1(username, key, value) values('andreak', 'A', 'value1');
insert into test1(username, key, value) values('andreak', 'A', 'value2');
insert into test1(username, key, value) values('andreak', 'A', 'value3');
insert into test1(username, key, value) values('andreak', 'B', 'value2');
insert into test1(username, key, value) values('andreak', 'B', 'value3');
insert into test1(username, key, value) values('andreak', 'B', 'value4');
insert into test1(username, key, value) values('andreak', null, 'value3');
insert into test1(username, key, value) values('andreak', null, 'value4');
insert into test1(username, key, value) values('andreak', null, 'value5');
For the sake of this example the test-case is greatly simplified, so I have
the following query to give me all rows for value='A' and value='B'
select t.username, t.key, t.value from test1 t where t.key = 'A'
UNION
select t.username, t.key, t.value from test1 t where t.key = 'B'
username | key | value
----------+-----+--------andreak | A | value1andreak | A | value2andreak | A | value3andreak | B |
value2andreak | B | value3andreak | B | value4
(6 rows)
Again, I know there are other, better, ways to accomplish that with this
simple schema, but again it's for the sake of the example. The important
thing here is that it's 2 UNION-queries providing the result.
Now - what I'm trying to accomplish is getting the following result-set:username | key | value
----------+-----+--------andreak | A | value1andreak | A | value2andreak | A | value3andreak | B |
value2andreak | B | value3andreak | B | value4andreak | | value5
(7 rows)
That is - I want all rows with username='andreak' AND (key IS NULL) where
the "value" is not in the previous result (not part of the other
UNION-queries). The hard, and important, part is that the resulting
rows' "value" must not exist in the "value"-column for any previous rows.
Here is one way I figured out how to do it:
select t.username, t.key, t.value from test1 t where t.key = 'A'
UNION
select t.username, t.key, t.value from test1 t where t.key = 'B'
UNION
select t.username, t.key, t.value from test1 t where t.value NOT IN ( select value from ( select t.username, t.key,
t.valuefrom test1 t where t.key = 'A' UNION select t.username, t.key, t.value from test1 t where t.key = 'B' ) tmp1
)
;
Given that my real schema is way more complex I'm looking for a solution which
doesn't involve issuing the NOT IN (original UNION-query) as it is a rather
heavy query.
Does anybody have a better approach to this problem?
--
Andreas Joseph Krogh <andreak@officenet.no>
Senior Software Developer / Manager
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