SQL Query assistance - Looping through data query - sqlite

I have two tables. Config and Data. Config table has info to define what I call "Predefined Points". The columns are configId, machineId, iotype, ioid, subfield and predeftype. I have a second table that contains all the data for all the items in the config table linked by configId. Data table contains configId, timestamp, value.
I am trying to return each row from the config table with 2 new columns in the result which would be min timestamp of this particular predefined point and max timestamp of this particular predefined point.
Pseudocode would be
select a.*, min(b.timestamp), max(b.timestamp) from TrendConfig a join TrendData b on a.configId = b.configId where configId = (select configId from TrendConfig)
Where the subquery would return multiple values.
Any idea how to formulate this?

Try an inner join:
select a.*, b.min(timestamp), b.max(timestamp)
from config a
inner join data b
on a.configId = b.configID

I was able to find an answer using: Why can't you mix Aggregate values and Non-Aggregate values in a single SELECT?
The solution was indeed GROUP BY as CL mentioned above.
select a.*, min(b.timestamp), max(b.timestamp) from TrendConfig a join TrendData b on a.configId = b.configId group by a.configId

Related

SQLite - Select by column value count

How do I select by column value count? In SQL query it would be something like this: select * from band inner join bandsinger on band.id = bandsinger.bandid inner join singer on singer.id = bandsinger.singerid group by band.id having count(singerid=6)>0 and count(singerid=4)>0 if SQLite function count() could accept a function as a parameter, but it doesn't.
The point is to select two bands, where two singers with known IDs sing.
I found the solution. In this case a query should be: select * from band inner join bandsinger on band.id = bandsinger.bandid inner join singer on singer.id = bandsinger.singerid where dinger.id = 6 or singer.id=4 group by band.id having count(*)=x where x is number of given IDs to count.

Need to apply Primary Indexes and secondary indexes in teradata tables

Can some one please help in solving my problem
I have three tables to be joined ed using indexes in Teradata to improve performance. Query specified below:-
Select b.Id, b.First_name, b.Last_name, c. Id,
c.First_name, c.Last_name, c.Result
from
(
select a.Id, a.First_name, a. Last_name, a.Approver1, a.Approver2
From table1 a
Inner join table2 d
On a.Id =D.Id
and A.Approver1 =a.Approver1
And a.Approve2 =D.Approver2
) b
Left join
(
select * from table3
where result is not null
and application like 'application1'
) c
On c. Id=b.Id
Group by b.Id, b.First_name, b.Last_name, c.Id,
c.First_name, c.Last_name, c.Result
The above query is taking so much of time since PI not defined correctly.
First two tables (table1 and 2) are with same set of columns hence pi can be defined like PI on I'd, approve1, approve2
However, while joining with table3 am confused and need to understand how to define pi. Is it something that PI can only work when we have same set of columns in the tables?
Structure of table3 is
I'd, first name, last name, result
And table 1 and table2
Id , First name, Last name, Approved 1, Approved 2, Results
Can you please help in defining primary indexes so that query can be optimised.
Teradata will usually not use Secondary Indexes for joins. The best PI would be id for all three tables, of course you need to check if there are not too many rows per value and it's not too skewed.
GROUP BY can be simplified to a DISTINCT, why do you need it, can you show the Primary Keys of those tables?
Edit based on comment:
PI-based joins are by far the fastest way. But you should be able the get rid of the DISTINCT, too, it's always a huge overhead.
Try replacing the 1st join with a NOT EXISTS:
Select b.Id, b.First_name, b.Last_name, c. Id,
c.First_name, c.Last_name, c.Result
from
(
select a.Id, a.First_name, a. Last_name, a.Approver1, a.Approver2
From table1 a
WHERE EXISTS
(
SELECT *
FROM table2 d
WHERE a.Id =D.Id
and A.Approver1 =a.Approver1
And a.Approve2 =D.Approver2
)
) b
Left join
(
select * from table3
where result is not null
and application like 'application1'
) c
On c. Id=b.Id

How to UPDATE multiple columns using a correlated subquery in SQLite?

I want to update multiple columns in a table using a correlated subquery. Updating a single column is straightforward:
UPDATE route
SET temperature = (SELECT amb_temp.temperature
FROM amb_temp.temperature
WHERE amb_temp.location = route.location)
However, I'd like to update several columns of the route table. As the subquery is much more complex in reality (JOIN with a nested subquery using SpatiaLite functions), I want to avoid repeating it like this:
UPDATE route
SET
temperature = (SELECT amb_temp.temperature
FROM amb_temp.temperature
WHERE amb_temp.location = route.location),
error = (SELECT amb_temp.error
FROM amb_temp.temperature
WHERE amb_temp.location = route.location),
Ideally, SQLite would let me do something like this:
UPDATE route
SET (temperature, error) = (SELECT amb_temp.temperature, amb_temp.error
FROM amb_temp.temperature
WHERE amb_temp.location = route.location)
Alas, that is not possible. Can this be solved in another way?
Here's what I've been considering so far:
use INSERT OR REPLACE as proposed in this answer. It seems it's not possible to refer to the route table in the subquery.
prepend the UPDATE query with a WITH clause, but I don't think that is useful in this case.
For completeness sake, here's the actual SQL query I'm working on:
UPDATE route SET (temperature, time_distance) = ( -- (C)
SELECT -- (B)
temperature.Temp,
MIN(ABS(julianday(temperature.Date_HrMn)
- julianday(route.date_time))) AS datetime_dist
FROM temperature
JOIN (
SELECT -- (A)
*, Distance(stations.geometry,route.geometry) AS distance
FROM stations
WHERE EXISTS (
SELECT 1
FROM temperature
WHERE stations.USAF = temperature.USAF
AND stations.WBAN_ID = temperature.NCDC
LIMIT 1
)
GROUP BY stations.geometry
ORDER BY distance
LIMIT 1
) tmp
ON tmp.USAF = temperature.USAF
AND tmp.WBAN_ID = temperature.NCDC
)
High-level description of this query:
using geometry (= longitude & latitude) and date_time from the route table,
(A) find the weather station (stations table, uniquely identified by the USAF and NCDC/WBAN_ID columns)
closest to the given longitude/latitude (geometry)
for which temperatures are present in the temperature table
(B) find the temperature table row
for the weather station found above
closest in time to the given timestamp
(C) store the temperature and "time_distance" in the route table

improve complex query in Teradata

I would like to know how to get all the rows from table1 that have a matching row in table3.
Teh structure of the tables is:
table1:
k1 k2
table2:
k1 k2 t1 t2 date type
table3:
t1 t2 date status
The conditions are:
k1 and k2 have to match with the corresponding columns in table2.
In table2 I will only chek those rows where date='today' and type='a'.
That can return 0, 1 or many rows in table2.
Looking at t1 and t2 from table 2, I get the rows that match in table3.
If in table3 date='today' and status='ok', I will return the original row from table1, this is, k1 and k2.
How can I do this query (inner joins, exists, whatever) having into account that the three tables have millions of rows, so it must be as optimal as possible?
I have the query, which is right for sure, but they are too many conditions for Teradata to come with the answer. Too many joins, I think.
I would not consider three tables and a few millions of rows a complex query.
In Teradata you usually don't have to think that much about join/in/exists, all will be rewritten to joins internally. But there's is a one-to-many-to-one relation, so you should avoid a join as this will need a final DISTINCT.
Better use IN or EXISTS instead:
SELECT
K1,K2
FROM Table1
WHERE (K1,K2) IN
(
SELECT K1,K2
FROM Table2
WHERE datecol = CURRENT_DATE
AND typecol = 'a'
AND (T1,T2) IN
(
SELECT T1,T2
FROM Table3
WHERE datecol = CURRENT_DATE
AND status = 'ok'
)
)
Regarding the actual plan: if there are the necessary statistics the optimizer should choose a good plan, check the confidences levels in Explain. You can also run a diagnostic helpstats on for session; before running Explain to see if there are missing stats.
Something like the following should work.
SELECT
Table1.*
FROM
Table1
INNER JOIN Table2 ON
Table1.K1 = Table2.K1 AND
Table1.K2 = Table2.K2 AND
Table2.date = CURRENT_DATE and
Table2.type = 'a'
INNER JOIN Table3 ON
Table2.T1 = Table3.T1 AND
Table2.T2 = Table3.T2 AND
Table3.date = CURRENT_DATE and
Table3.status = "OK"
Update:
Speaking more to the optimization part of the question. The execution steps that Teradata will most likely take here are:
In parallel it will select all records from Table1, Records from Table2 where the date is CURRENT_DATE and the type is a, and Records from Table3 where the date is CURRENT_DATE and the status is OK.
It will then join the results from the SELECT of Table2 to the results of the SELECT from table1.
It will then join the results from that to the results from the SELECT of table3.
You can get more information by putting EXPLAIN before your SELECT query. The results returned from the database will be the explanation of your Teradata server will execute the query, which can be very enlightening when trying to optimize a big slow query.
Unfortunately the steps above are the best you can hope for. Parallel execution of all three tables with the filters applied, and then a join of the results. With big data, the slowest part of a query is often the join, so filtering before you get to that step is a big plus.
There's more that can be done to optimize like making sure your Indexes are in order and Collecting statistics, especially on fields where you will be filtering. But without the admin access to do that, your hands are tied.

Advanced SQLite Update table query

I am trying to update Table B of a database looking like this:
Table A:
id, amount, date, b_id
1,200,6/31/2012,1
2,300,6/31/2012,1
3,400,6/29/2012,2
4,200,6/31/2012,1
5,200,6/31/2012,2
6,200,6/31/2012,1
7,200,6/31/2012,2
8,200,6/31/2012,2
Table B:
id, b_amount, b_date
1,0,0
2,0,0
3,0,0
Now with this query I get all the data I need in one select:
SELECT A.*,B.* FROM A LEFT JOIN B ON B.id=A.b_id WHERE A.b_id>0 GROUP BY B.id
id, amount, date, b_id, id, b_amount, b_date
1,200,6/31/2012,1,1,0,0
3,400,6/29/2012,1,1,0,0
Now, I just want to copy the selected column amount to b_amount and date to b_date
b_amount=amount, b_date=date
resulting in
id, amount, date, b_id, id, b_amount, b_date
1,200,6/31/2012,1,1,200,6/31/2012
3,400,6/29/2012,1,1,400,6/29/2012
I've tried COALESCE() without success.
Does someone experienced have a solution for this?
Solution:
Thanks to the answers below, I managed to come up with this. It is probably not the most efficient way but it is fine for a one time only update. This will insert for you the first corresponding entry of each group.
REPLACE INTO A SELECT id, amount, date FROM
(SELECT A.id, A.amount, B.id as Bid FROM A INNER JOIN B ON (B.id=A.B_id)
ORDER BY A.id DESC)
GROUP BY Bid;
So what you are looking for seems to be a JOIN inside of an UPDATE query. In mySQL you would use
UPDATE B INNER JOIN A ON B.id=A.b_id SET B.amount=A.amount, B.date=A.date;
but this is not supported by sqlite as this probably related question points out. However, there is a workaround using REPLACE:
REPLACE INTO B
SELECT B.id, A.amount, A.date FROM A
LEFT JOIN B ON B.id=A.b_id
WHERE A.b_id>0 GROUP BY B.id;
The query will simply fill in the values of table B for all columns which should keep their state and fill in the values of table A for the copied values. Make sure the order of the columns in the SELECT statement meet your column order of table B and all columns are mentioned or you will loose these field's data. This is probably dangerous for future changes on table B. So keep in mind to change the column order/presence of this query when changing table B.
Something a bit off topic, because you did not ask for that: A.b_id is obviously a foreign key to B.id. It seems you are using the value 0 for the foreign key to express that there is no corresponding entry in B. (Inferred from your SELECT with WHERE A.b_id>0.) You should consider using the null value for that. When you are using INNER JOIN then instead of LEFT JOIN you can drop the WHERE clause entirely. The DBS will then sort out all unsatisfied relations.
WARNING Some RDBMS will return 2 rows as you show above. Others will return the Cartesian product of the rows i.e. A rows times B rows.
One tricky method is to generate SQL that is then executed
SELECT "update B set b.b_amount = ", a.amount, ", b.b_date = ", a.date,
" where b.id = ", a.b_id
FROM A LEFT JOIN B ON B.id=A.b_id WHERE A.b_id>0 GROUP BY B.id
Now add the batch terminator and execute this SQL. The query result should look like this
update B set b.b_amount = 200, b.b_date = 6/31/2012 where b.id = 1
update B set b.b_amount = 400, b.b_date = 6/29/2012 where b.id = 3
NOTE: Some RDBMS will handle dates differently. Some require quotes.

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