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I have a table with records and it has a row called category. I have inserted too many articles and I want to select only two articles from each category.

I tried to do something like this:

I created a view:

CREATE VIEW limitrows AS 
   SELECT * FROM tbl_artikujt ORDER BY articleid DESC LIMIT 2 

Then I created this query:

SELECT * 
FROM tbl_artikujt 
WHERE 
   artikullid IN
   (
      SELECT artikullid
      FROM limitrows
      ORDER BY category DESC
   )
ORDER BY category DESC;

But this is not working and is giving me only two records?

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2 Answers

up vote 5 down vote accepted

LIMIT only stops the number of results the statement returns. What you're looking for is generally called analytic/windowing/ranking functions - which MySQL doesn't support but you can emulate using variables:

SELECT x.*
  FROM (SELECT t.*,
               CASE 
                 WHEN @category != t.category THEN @rownum := 1 
                 ELSE @rownum := @rownum + 1 
               END AS rank,
               @category := t.category AS var_category
          FROM TBL_ARTIKUJT t
          JOIN (SELECT @rownum := NULL, @category := '') r
      ORDER BY t.category) x
 WHERE x.rank <= 3

If you don't change SELECT x.*, the result set will include the rank and var_category values - you'll have to specify the columns you really want if this isn't the case.

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Works perfect, thats what i needed – AXheladini Jun 30 '10 at 8:21
Can i create view in some way from this select, i tried but it says : 1349 - View's SELECT contains a subquery in the FROM clause – AXheladini Jun 30 '10 at 9:04
@AXheladini: Sorry, MySQL won't allow it for a few reasons - the subquery, using variables... MySQL views are extremely restricted, I'm afraid - they list the restrictions in the CREATE VIEW documentation: dev.mysql.com/doc/refman/5.1/en/create-view.html – OMG Ponies Jun 30 '10 at 15:04

Read this article: Top N of a group

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