PostgreSQL GROUP BY different from MySQL?

Solution 1:

MySQL's totally non standards compliant GROUP BY can be emulated by Postgres' DISTINCT ON. Consider this:

MySQL:

SELECT a,b,c,d,e FROM table GROUP BY a

This delivers 1 row per value of a (which one, you don't really know). Well actually you can guess, because MySQL doesn't know about hash aggregates, so it will probably use a sort... but it will only sort on a, so the order of the rows could be random. Unless it uses a multicolumn index instead of sorting. Well, anyway, it's not specified by the query.

Postgres:

SELECT DISTINCT ON (a) a,b,c,d,e FROM table ORDER BY a,b,c

This delivers 1 row per value of a, this row will be the first one in the sort according to the ORDER BY specified by the query. Simple.

Note that here, it's not an aggregate I'm computing. So GROUP BY actually makes no sense. DISTINCT ON makes a lot more sense.

Rails is married to MySQL, so I'm not surprised that it generates SQL that doesn't work in Postgres.

Solution 2:

PostgreSQL is more SQL compliant than MySQL. All fields - except computed field with aggregation function - in the output must be present in the GROUP BY clause.

Solution 3:

MySQL's GROUP BY can be used without an aggregate function (which is contrary to the SQL standard), and returns the first row in the group (I don't know based on what criteria), while PostgreSQL must have an aggregate function (MAX, SUM, etc) on the column, on which the GROUP BY clause is issued.

Solution 4:

Correct, the solution to fixing this is to use :select and to select each field that you wish to decorate the resulting object with and group by them.

Nasty - but it is how group by should work as opposed to how MySQL works with it by guessing what you mean if you don't stick fields in your group by.