Thread

  1. How to just get the last in a recursive query

    Shaozhong SHI <shishaozhong@gmail.com> — 2022-04-04T22:14:22Z

    ---------- Forwarded message ---------
    From: Shaozhong SHI <shishaozhong@gmail.com>
    Date: Mon, 4 Apr 2022 at 23:13
    Subject: How to just get the last in a recursive query
    To: PostGIS Users Discussion <postgis-users@lists.osgeo.org>
    
    
    In this example, Network Walking in PostGIS · Paul Ramsey
    (cleverelephant.ca)
    <http://blog.cleverelephant.ca/2010/07/network-walking-in-postgis.html>
    
    3 rows got returns as follows:
    
     id
    ---
      6
      3
      1
    
    
    How to just get the last (namely, 1) in the most efficient way?
    
    Regards, David
    
  2. Re: How to just get the last in a recursive query

    Rob Sargent <robjsargent@gmail.com> — 2022-04-04T22:16:02Z

    On 4/4/22 16:14, Shaozhong SHI wrote:
    >
    >
    > ---------- Forwarded message ---------
    > From: *Shaozhong SHI* <shishaozhong@gmail.com>
    > Date: Mon, 4 Apr 2022 at 23:13
    > Subject: How to just get the last in a recursive query
    > To: PostGIS Users Discussion <postgis-users@lists.osgeo.org>
    >
    >
    > In this example, Network Walking in PostGIS · Paul Ramsey 
    > (cleverelephant.ca) 
    > <http://blog.cleverelephant.ca/2010/07/network-walking-in-postgis.html>
    >
    > 3 rows got returns as follows:
    >
    > |id --- 6 3 1|
    > ||
    > |How to just get the last (namely, 1) in the most efficient way?|
    > Regards, David
    reverse the order of the last query and set limit 1
  3. Re: How to just get the last in a recursive query

    Shaozhong SHI <shishaozhong@gmail.com> — 2022-04-04T23:21:52Z

    That is not the most efficient in this case.
    How to tell query to deliberately miss out all except the last one is of
    interest.
    Regards, David
    
    On Monday, 4 April 2022, Rob Sargent <robjsargent@gmail.com> wrote:
    
    > On 4/4/22 16:14, Shaozhong SHI wrote:
    >
    >
    >
    > ---------- Forwarded message ---------
    > From: Shaozhong SHI <shishaozhong@gmail.com>
    > Date: Mon, 4 Apr 2022 at 23:13
    > Subject: How to just get the last in a recursive query
    > To: PostGIS Users Discussion <postgis-users@lists.osgeo.org>
    >
    >
    > In this example, Network Walking in PostGIS · Paul Ramsey
    > (cleverelephant.ca)
    > <http://blog.cleverelephant.ca/2010/07/network-walking-in-postgis.html>
    >
    > 3 rows got returns as follows:
    >
    >  id
    > ---
    >   6
    >   3
    >   1
    >
    >  How to just get the last (namely, 1) in the most efficient way?
    >
    > Regards, David
    >
    > reverse the order of the last query and set limit 1
    >
    
  4. Re: How to just get the last in a recursive query

    Rob Sargent <robjsargent@gmail.com> — 2022-04-04T23:24:42Z

    On 4/4/22 17:21, Shaozhong SHI wrote:
    > That is not the most efficient in this case.
    > How to tell query to deliberately miss out all except the last one is 
    > of interest.
    > Regards, David
    >
    > On Monday, 4 April 2022, Rob Sargent <robjsargent@gmail.com> wrote:
    >
    >     On 4/4/22 16:14, Shaozhong SHI wrote:
    >>
    >>
    >>     ---------- Forwarded message ---------
    >>     From: *Shaozhong SHI* <shishaozhong@gmail.com>
    >>     Date: Mon, 4 Apr 2022 at 23:13
    >>     Subject: How to just get the last in a recursive query
    >>     To: PostGIS Users Discussion <postgis-users@lists.osgeo.org>
    >>
    >>
    >>     In this example, Network Walking in PostGIS · Paul Ramsey
    >>     (cleverelephant.ca)
    >>     <http://blog.cleverelephant.ca/2010/07/network-walking-in-postgis.html>
    >>
    >>     3 rows got returns as follows:
    >>
    >>     |id --- 6 3 1|
    >>     ||
    >>     |How to just get the last (namely, 1) in the most efficient way?|
    >>     Regards, David
    >     reverse the order of the last query and set limit 1
    >
    Don't top post
    
    And your definition of "last" is what, exactly
    
  5. Re: How to just get the last in a recursive query

    David G. Johnston <david.g.johnston@gmail.com> — 2022-04-04T23:32:12Z

    On Mon, Apr 4, 2022, 16:21 Shaozhong SHI <shishaozhong@gmail.com> wrote:
    
    > That is not the most efficient in this case.
    
    
    Can you prove that statement?  Provide a query that is more efficient.
    
    David J.
    
  6. Re: How to just get the last in a recursive query

    Steve Midgley <science@misuse.org> — 2022-04-05T00:00:00Z

    On Mon, Apr 4, 2022 at 4:32 PM David G. Johnston <david.g.johnston@gmail.com>
    wrote:
    
    > On Mon, Apr 4, 2022, 16:21 Shaozhong SHI <shishaozhong@gmail.com> wrote:
    >
    >> That is not the most efficient in this case.
    >
    >
    > Can you prove that statement?  Provide a query that is more efficient.
    >
    
    Just to share the SQL from that example
    
    WITH RECURSIVE walk_network(id, segment) AS (
      SELECT id, segment
        FROM network
        WHERE id = 6
      UNION ALL
      SELECT n.id, n.segment
        FROM network n, walk_network w
        WHERE ST_DWithin(
          ST_EndPoint(w.segment),
          ST_StartPoint(n.segment),0.01))SELECT idFROM walk_network
    
    
    David J (kind of off-topic): There's no *order by *in the original query,
    so I could imagine that adding any order by clause at all would make the
    query less efficient. But maybe it could become more efficient if the
    planner picks a better index as a result?
    
    David (OP): My main point is that in this example, since no order by clause
    is provided, it is meaningless to talk about a "last" or "first" item. SQL,
    afaik, is not required to produce the results in any order whatsoever, when
    no order by clause is provided (corrections welcome if that's not
    accurate). So while you might grab the last item somehow this time, it
    might not be the last item, the next time you run the query. So I'd say you
    should add an appropriate order by query, and then you can measure "ASC" vs
    "DESC" with "LIMIT 1" to see if either one is less efficient. (I'm in David
    J's camp that it's unlikely to make any difference)
    
    Steve
    
  7. Re: How to just get the last in a recursive query

    David G. Johnston <david.g.johnston@gmail.com> — 2022-04-05T00:50:09Z

    On Mon, Apr 4, 2022 at 5:00 PM Steve Midgley <science@misuse.org> wrote:
    
    > On Mon, Apr 4, 2022 at 4:32 PM David G. Johnston <
    > david.g.johnston@gmail.com> wrote:
    >
    >> On Mon, Apr 4, 2022, 16:21 Shaozhong SHI <shishaozhong@gmail.com> wrote:
    >>
    >>> That is not the most efficient in this case.
    >>
    >>
    >> Can you prove that statement?  Provide a query that is more efficient.
    >>
    >
    > Just to share the SQL from that example
    >
    > WITH RECURSIVE walk_network(id, segment) AS (
    >   SELECT id, segment
    >     FROM network
    >     WHERE id = 6
    >   UNION ALL
    >   SELECT n.id, n.segment
    >     FROM network n, walk_network w
    >     WHERE ST_DWithin(
    >       ST_EndPoint(w.segment),
    >       ST_StartPoint(n.segment),0.01))SELECT idFROM walk_network
    >
    >
    > David J (kind of off-topic): There's no *order by *in the original query,
    > so I could imagine that adding any order by clause at all would make the
    > query less efficient. But maybe it could become more efficient if the
    > planner picks a better index as a result?
    >
    > David (OP): My main point is that in this example, since no order by
    > clause is provided, it is meaningless to talk about a "last" or "first"
    > item. SQL, afaik, is not required to produce the results in any order
    > whatsoever, when no order by clause is provided (corrections welcome if
    > that's not accurate). So while you might grab the last item somehow this
    > time, it might not be the last item, the next time you run the query. So
    > I'd say you should add an appropriate order by query, and then you can
    > measure "ASC" vs "DESC" with "LIMIT 1" to see if either one is less
    > efficient. (I'm in David J's camp that it's unlikely to make any difference)
    >
    >
    Reading the query now...
    
    I get the desire of the OP - walk the graph and just output the final node
    that you fall upon.  The nature of a recursive CTE is that it can/does have
    a natural order if the graph produced is linear - thus it has a well
    defined last node.  The CTE, however, captures the entire path.  The main
    query, which only cares about the final node, then has to reverse the path
    and then select the first node.  That is the solution that was provided.
    
    There is no way to get the final node in a path, giving a starting node,
    without walking the path.  Or rather, if there is for a given set of data,
    a recursive CTE is not the best way to get at it.  I'll admin the presence
    of PostGIS makes this a bit harder for me to personally reason about, but
    the concept is valid and turning the CTE into a subquery, reversing the
    output (which should have an index indicating node order, in addition to
    the node id), and doing limit 1 gives the desired answer.
    
    Is there a better way to get that answer for this particular query - I have
    no clue - but absent a better answer the OP needs to just take the one
    suggestion that does provide a valid answer and assume it is the best
    possible.  Since no other suggestion exists the one answer is by definition
    also the best answer.
    
    David J.
    
  8. RE: How to just get the last in a recursive query

    Tchouante, Merlin <mtchouan@umaryland.edu> — 2022-04-05T13:03:44Z

    These worked for me:
    
    These lists the results in reverse order based on the rownum and returns first row, which is actually the last row, just in reversed order.
    
    Oracle:
    select *
    from (select umab.umab_directory_info.*, rownum
    from  umab.umab_directory_info
    where pidm = 0
    ORDER BY ROWNUM DESC)
    WHERE ROWNUM=1;
    
    
    Pgsql-sql:
    
    select course_id from (select course_main.course_id, row_number() OVER (ORDER BY course_id)
    from  course_main
    where course_name like '%DO NOT USE%'
    ORDER BY row_number DESC limit 1) cm
    
    You need an alias (cm), otherwise you will get an error.
    
    Thanks,
      -- Merlin
    
    
    Merlin D. Tchouante, Sr. IT Enterprise Application Developer
    Center for Information Technology Services (CITS)
    601 West Lombard Street
    Baltimore, Maryland 21201-1512
    mtchouan@umaryland.edu<mailto:mtchouan@umaryland.edu>
    410-706-4489 * 410-706-1500 fax
    
    Please send Blackboard questions to the CITS support email address:  DL-CITSBbSupport@umaryland.edu<mailto:dl-citsbbsupport@umaryland.edu>
    Please send Mediasite questions to the CITS support email address:  DL-CITSMediasiteSupport@umaryland.edu<mailto:DL-CITSMediasiteSupport@umaryland.edu>
    
    [New UMB Logo]
    
    From: Shaozhong SHI <shishaozhong@gmail.com>
    Sent: Monday, April 4, 2022 7:22 PM
    To: Rob Sargent <robjsargent@gmail.com>
    Cc: pgsql-sql@lists.postgresql.org
    Subject: Re: How to just get the last in a recursive query
    
    CAUTION: This message originated from a non-UMB email system. Hover over any links before clicking and use caution opening attachments.
    That is not the most efficient in this case.
    How to tell query to deliberately miss out all except the last one is of interest.
    Regards, David
    
    On Monday, 4 April 2022, Rob Sargent <robjsargent@gmail.com<mailto:robjsargent@gmail.com>> wrote:
    On 4/4/22 16:14, Shaozhong SHI wrote:
    
    ---------- Forwarded message ---------
    From: Shaozhong SHI <shishaozhong@gmail.com<mailto:shishaozhong@gmail.com>>
    Date: Mon, 4 Apr 2022 at 23:13
    Subject: How to just get the last in a recursive query
    To: PostGIS Users Discussion <postgis-users@lists.osgeo.org<mailto:postgis-users@lists.osgeo.org>>
    
    In this example, Network Walking in PostGIS * Paul Ramsey (cleverelephant.ca)<https://nam11.safelinks.protection.outlook.com/?url=http%3A%2F%2Fblog.cleverelephant.ca%2F2010%2F07%2Fnetwork-walking-in-postgis.html&data=04%7C01%7Cmtchouan%40umaryland.edu%7Cccca8e4f951e4780dde008da1691ecb0%7C3dcdbc4a7e4c407b80f77fb6757182f2%7C0%7C0%7C637847113257889566%7CUnknown%7CTWFpbGZsb3d8eyJWIjoiMC4wLjAwMDAiLCJQIjoiV2luMzIiLCJBTiI6Ik1haWwiLCJXVCI6Mn0%3D%7C3000&sdata=xVii1WKKxTDHx5kZUH49X5tyWwbPkxanjSBoMgpDnCk%3D&reserved=0>
    
    3 rows got returns as follows:
    
    
     id
    
    ---
    
      6
    
      3
    
      1
    
    
    
    How to just get the last (namely, 1) in the most efficient way?
    
    Regards, David
    reverse the order of the last query and set limit 1