@PM2Ring Thanks, that made me finally get it. So relative_brightness = 1/(100**(1/5))**(apparant_magnitude). That seems not very clear in the wiki article. Now back to looking at the original data with this new understanding :)
TIL that if you accidentally write .. foo: instead of .. foo::, sphinx will just silently ignore that line. Wonder how many people learned that the hard way like me
sqlfiddle.com/#!4/028a51/1 Taking another shot at a sane problem description: every employer has a unique employer_id. Each employer assigns employee ids to its employees, ensuring that the id is unique within their own business. They refuse to coordinate with other businesses, so lots of employee ids overlap globally. As a result, I am forced to use (employer_id, employee_id) as a composite primary key.
My goal is to choose one row from each distinct position. The code I have works, but it uses rowid, which is scary and brittle. What are my alternatives?
I recall that Aran-Fey suggested partition yesterday, I must take a second look at that
with temp as (
select employees.*,
ROW_NUMBER() OVER (PARTITION BY position ORDER BY employee_id) row_nr
from employees
)
select * from temp
where row_nr = 1
Would love to know why that with temp as is required btw
select employees.*,
ROW_NUMBER() OVER (PARTITION BY position ORDER BY employee_id) row_nr
from employees
where row_nr = 1
-- "ROW_NR": invalid identifier
I reckon it's because it evaluates the query in a nonlinear order. Like the evil twin of a list comprehension. Something like:
for row in employees:
if len(loudname) > 3:
loudname = row["name"].upper()
output.append({"loudname": loudname})
The with temp clause is effectively like having two consecutive loops, where the first creates the loudname values, and the second may look at loudname in its if clause
I know! Oracle should introduce the walrus operator! This is an excellent plan.
Today will likely be the apex of my SQL frenzy, so you can look forward to returning to a peaceful Python-based existence at quitting time (EST)
Possibly useful: assigning a unique number to each row. Took me a while to figure out that row_number() has to have an over clause, but it doesn't have to have a partition by clause.
sqlfiddle.com/#!4/028a51/36 Pros: result has exactly the same columns as employees without having to specify each name individually. Cons: probably O(N^2). Still uses rowid.
I could eliminate the rowid reference and write proper comparison logic based on composite primary key, but it pains me
I don't think that would work? With > rowid, you're checking whether that's the last employee with a given role. You can't do that with the primary key
I think I can do it if I use case, i.e. Oracle's ternary operator. Also, since I'm happy to take any representative row that's easy to take, I don't mind changing my logic to get the first employee in the group rather than the last one.
... Or possibly vice versa? I'm very turned around
Probably it has different expectations for "expressions that return a boolean" vs "expressions that might return a non-boolean". In the query select a from b where c < d, the expression c < d is guaranteed to have a boolean result. But if I tried select a from b where case c < d then e < f else g < h end, The parser doesn't know for sure that the case ternary will always return a bool.
We humans can easily see that it does, simply by observing that it can only evaluate to one of e<f and g<h. But presumably the parser wasn't designed to go crawling all through the AST to prove type consistency.
While we ponder self joins, here is my case-based proposal, except I replaced case when X then Y else Z end with (X and Y) or (not X and Z), plus some simplification
Pros: O(n log n) run time; no usage of `rowid` Cons: result has one more column than the input; uses arcane aggregate function that none of your coworkers will be familiar with
If anyone says to me "It's ready to go, you just need to hit the deploy button" to me again, I will not be responsible for my actions. All of the fires
He's off for a week. The customer started ringing him anyway so I feel a little better about that :P It was a completely irreversible detonation so I had no choice but to go forwards and just... hope :/
That reminds me of when I first got to the Tesco offices. They had a sign for "days since last unicycle accident". Turns out, it wasn't joke. They used to take one out in the car park at lunch
@Kevin For these situations you would generally have an "association table" where you would have a many-to-many join between employer and employee ids
Though that might be overkill for your setup and probably not worth going back and implementing for something rather small. It depends on how extensible it needs to be going into the future
I don't mind making an association table. Who knows what the DB administrator's opinion is, though.
I'm not sure if a many-to-many relationship makes sense on a conceptual level. An employer has many employees, but an employee has only one employer. (yes, having two jobs is a thing that happens in real life, but it doesn't happen in my hypothetical world)
I think the most practical approach would be to create a blind primary key for the employees table. Guaranteed globally unique, regardless of what the employers assign to the employees.
If you just want to convey the usefulness of some general SQL design principle, feel free to use any SQL dialect you like. Don't contort yourself into valid Oracle for my sake :-)
I actually wanted to play a little bit before passing anything back to you so I shall battle through :) I'm not convinced my thought process will buy you anything. Also, thinking about it more, you might be just fine with the rowid because I'm not sure any concurrent write is going to get in your way - that should go into the write-ahead log. But I don't know for Oracle
Also, I feel I should know what it's complaining about anyway but even from that answer I don't know what it's flapping about. And it won't let me start my CTEs with an underscore, which is just a red card
The majority of my "invalid identifier" errors are because my where or group by logic contains a name that I defined inside my select. Earlier in the transcript, you can see how this very problem made Aran-Fey swear off databases until 2023.
"I feel I should know what it's complaining about" -- only the most powerful oracles of Oracle can divine the true meaning of their cryptic syntax errors
If I had a nickel for every time I got "missing right parenthesis" in an expression that had N left parens and N right parens... I'd have like, a dollar this month.
In postgres I actually go out of my way to follow my own mental style guide, despite the fact that the engine itself doesn't enforce it, because I know it will help future roganjosh. This one is just complaining at me for what would be perfectly valid in other dialects
Yep, I had that yesterday when select a, b from T group by a worked in sqlite but not Oracle.
It took me a very long time, but I'm beginning to understand the shape of their madness. The reason why select a, b from can be valid syntax in some contexts but not others. I think lizard people and the hollow earth are involved at one point.
@kevin I have concluded that Aran's method with the partition is probably the best you'll get on this. I was trying some fancy join but it just doesn't make sense
Lizard people don't exist. Except in Oracle where they do. And probably nasal demons too
I will happily throw more unsubstantiated claims at a proprietary product when a vastly superior free and open-source alternative exists. I wonder what I'll "catch" Oracle at next!
So Lizard people exist only in Oracle (according to Roganjosh). Ok.
I just don't understand why Roganjosh doesn't want me to believe in the reptilian conspiracy theory if he does (well, "there are reptilians at Oracle").
I mean, I could find a multitude of different words that try to explain the humour but "I was just being an idiot and going along with it for attempted humour" probably suffices
For the record, I don't believe in lizard people. I would have hoped that was self-evident based on my other discussions that have at least some grounding in sanity. If not, I will try work on it
Acting like you believe something that you don't believe in has many practical applications in game-theoretical scenarios. May as well get some practice in, when the stakes are low
Marco will be richly rewarded by his reptilian master for convincing roganjosh to publicly doubt their existence. Another piece in this 5D chess game has been taken off the board.
I wonder if a development tool like this exists: I have a database with a large number of tables. Suppose each table has a primary key, and may have any number of foreign keys. I would like to enter the names of two tables, A and Z, and see which tables I need to traverse to get from one to another.
For example, it might say grommet.pallet_id = pallet.pallet_id; pallet.current_location_id = warehouse.location_id; warehouse.foreman_id = employee.employee_id; employee.preferred_safety_hat = sale_catalog.product_id. Now I can implement a feature where, if a customer is particularly pleased with the quality of their grommet, they can buy the responsible foreman a new hat which he will surely like.
Yeah. I could certainly write one myself. But if there's one I can download and run in five minutes, and it already knows how to avoid Oracle's 1000 corner cases, then I would prefer that.
I think the free market of ideas isn't meeting my needs, because I'm halfway between the two biggest demographics. First, the people who are happy to just do whatever and keep trying random things until something works. They don't need diagrams, they just need grit and overtime hours.
Second, the people who want dazzlingly clear indicators of relationships between tables. They don't need diagrams, because they already got their boss to buy the whizbang 300-in-1 ORM / query planner / static code linter / teeth whitener. It projects the UML directly into their subconscious while they dream at night.
And of course, it costs $10,000 per person per year because they put "enterprise" in the title
sigh. FGITWs can be wrong in multiple ways and not help solve the problem (which is itself unclear), and still get upvoted before the question can be closed.
(thankfully, a downvote plus a comment with a detailed explanation of what is wrong with the answer, will often get the answerer to delete)
FGITWs have wasted much of my time this week. I would research a design problem I was having, and find a question that matched almost perfectly, and it would be full of brainless replies that only work if several unfounded assumptions about the data hold true. Things like "a person's first name can uniquely identify them"
Of course, I still had to read through all of them on the off chance that one of them would actually have the correct answer
By SQL I mean't "learning SQL" sorry. You're pretty much there. You have 90% of the pieces as far as I can see
The bits you don't - steal them. I needed the barcode scanner from the factory stores so I just went and wove a lovely story about how things will work in the future... after being explicitly denied from building the system. On second thought, it might not be the safest approach :P
Still, it goes beep beep in, and beep beep out. I probably got this