I've got a rather interesting situation. I have a SQLite database full of addresses and messages (addresses are not unique; messages are). Each message also has a date associated with it. What I want to do is select the first message's address, message, date, and how many messages are associated with the address.
So, I thought, "I can just GROUP by the address to only get one message per address, then ORDER these by the date, and also fetch the COUNT of the address column."
I did that, and it works... kinda. It fetches the correct count, fetches only one message per address, and orders them by date--but it does not select the most recent message for the address. It appears to be arbitrary.
As an example, I have three messages (earliest to latest) A, B, C from address Y, and three messages D, E, F from address Z. The query may fetch messages B and E, then sort them by date. It should fetch messages C and F, and sort those by date.
Here is what I have so far:
// Expanded version:
Cursor cursor = db.query(
/* FROM */ "messages_database",
/* SELECT */ new String[]{ "*", "COUNT(address) AS count" },
/* WHERE */ null,
/* WHERE args */ null,
/* GROUP BY */ "address",
/* HAVING */ null,
/* ORDER BY */ "date DESC"
);
// Or, same code on one line:
Cursor cursor = db.query("messages_database", new String[]{ "*", "COUNT(address) AS count" }, null, null, "address", null, "date DESC");
I feel like this may have to do with the HAVING
clause, but I really don't know. I've used MySQL a lot with PHP, but never had to touch HAVING
before. I tried setting my HAVING
clause to "MAX(date)"
, but it had no effect. If I set my GROUP BY
clause to be "address, date"
, then they are sorted by date, but of course they are all individual instead of grouped (since the dates differ).
Google searches have proved fruitless; queries like "android sqlite order before group" and "android sqlite group by order" yield no related results.
How can I select the one latest message for each address without removing my GROUP
clause (as COUNT()
relies upon this)? Do I need two queries?
Edit: Based on the answer @Adrian linked me to in the comments, I came up with two queries which both produced the same result; one row, in which the count was 7 (which is the total number of addresses, not messages per address), and the address shown was not that of the latest message.
The two queries were:
Cursor cursor = db.rawQuery(
"SELECT t.*, COUNT(t.message_content) AS count "
+ "FROM messages_database t "
+ "INNER JOIN ("
+ " SELECT address, MAX(date) AS maxdate "
+ " FROM messages_database "
+ " GROUP BY address "
+ ") ss ON t.address = ss.address AND t.date = ss.maxdate",
null
);
Cursor cursor = db.rawQuery(
"SELECT t1.*, COUNT(t1.message_content) AS count "
+ "FROM messages_database t1 "
+ "LEFT OUTER JOIN messages_database t2 "
+ "ON (t1.address = t2.address AND t1.date < t2.date) "
+ "WHERE t2.address IS NULL",
null
);