Using PostgreSQL 9.0.
Let's say I have a table containing the fields: company, profession and year. I want to return a result which contains unique companies and professions, but aggregates (into an array is fine) years based on numeric sequence:
Example Table:
+-----------------------------+
| company | profession | year |
+---------+------------+------+
| Google | Programmer | 2000 |
| Google | Sales | 2000 |
| Google | Sales | 2001 |
| Google | Sales | 2002 |
| Google | Sales | 2004 |
| Mozilla | Sales | 2002 |
+-----------------------------+
I'm interested in a query which would output rows similar to the following:
+-----------------------------------------+
| company | profession | year |
+---------+------------+------------------+
| Google | Programmer | [2000] |
| Google | Sales | [2000,2001,2002] |
| Google | Sales | [2004] |
| Mozilla | Sales | [2002] |
+-----------------------------------------+
The essential feature is that only consecutive years shall be grouped together.
Identifying non-consecutive values is always a bit tricky and involves several nested sub-queries (at least I cannot come up with a better solution).
The first step is to identify non-consecutive values for the year:
select company,
profession,
year,
case
when row_number() over (partition by company, profession order by year) = 1 or
year - lag(year,1,year) over (partition by company, profession order by year) > 1 then 1
else 0
end as group_cnt
from qualification
This returns the following result:
company | profession | year | group_cnt ---------+------------+------+----------- Google | Programmer | 2000 | 1 Google | Sales | 2000 | 1 Google | Sales | 2001 | 0 Google | Sales | 2002 | 0 Google | Sales | 2004 | 1 Mozilla | Sales | 2002 | 1
Now with the group_cnt value we can create "group IDs" for each group that has consecutive years:
select company,
profession,
year,
sum(group_cnt) over (order by company, profession, year) as group_nr
from (
select company,
profession,
year,
case
when row_number() over (partition by company, profession order by year) = 1 or
year - lag(year,1,year) over (partition by company, profession order by year) > 1 then 1
else 0
end as group_cnt
from qualification
) t1
This returns the following result:
company | profession | year | group_nr ---------+------------+------+---------- Google | Programmer | 2000 | 1 Google | Sales | 2000 | 2 Google | Sales | 2001 | 2 Google | Sales | 2002 | 2 Google | Sales | 2004 | 3 Mozilla | Sales | 2002 | 4 (6 rows)
As you can see each "group" got its own group_nr and this we can finally use to aggregate over by adding yet another derived table:
select company,
profession,
array_agg(year) as years
from (
select company,
profession,
year,
sum(group_cnt) over (order by company, profession, year) as group_nr
from (
select company,
profession,
year,
case
when row_number() over (partition by company, profession order by year) = 1 or
year - lag(year,1,year) over (partition by company, profession order by year) > 1 then 1
else 0
end as group_cnt
from qualification
) t1
) t2
group by company, profession, group_nr
order by company, profession, group_nr
This returns the following result:
company | profession | years
---------+------------+------------------
Google | Programmer | {2000}
Google | Sales | {2000,2001,2002}
Google | Sales | {2004}
Mozilla | Sales | {2002}
(4 rows)
Which is exactly what you wanted, if I'm not mistaken.
There's much value to @a_horse_with_no_name's answer, both as a correct solution and, like I already said in a comment, as a good material for learning how to use different kinds of window functions in PostgreSQL.
And yet I cannot help feeling that the approach taken in that answer is a bit too much of an effort for a problem like this one. Basically, what you need is an additional criterion for grouping before you go on aggregating years in arrays. You've already got company and profession, now you only need something to distinguish years that belong to different sequences.
That is just what the above mentioned answer provides and that is precisely what I think can be done in a simpler way. Here's how:
WITH MarkedForGrouping AS (
SELECT
company,
profession,
year,
year - ROW_NUMBER() OVER (
PARTITION BY company, profession
ORDER BY year
) AS seqID
FROM atable
)
SELECT
company,
profession,
array_agg(year) AS years
FROM MarkedForGrouping
GROUP BY
company,
profession,
seqID
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