1
0
mirror of https://github.com/jbranchaud/til synced 2026-01-05 08:08:02 +00:00

Add Find Duplicate Records In Table Without Unique Id as a postgres til

This commit is contained in:
jbranchaud
2021-05-14 17:16:21 -05:00
parent 7082775f0e
commit 466310eb6d
2 changed files with 47 additions and 1 deletions

View File

@@ -10,7 +10,7 @@ pairing with smart people at Hashrocket.
For a steady stream of TILs, [sign up for my newsletter](https://tinyletter.com/jbranchaud).
_1124 TILs and counting..._
_1125 TILs and counting..._
---
@@ -558,6 +558,7 @@ _1124 TILs and counting..._
- [Escaping String Literals With Dollar Quoting](postgres/escaping-string-literals-with-dollar-quoting.md)
- [Export Query Results To A CSV](postgres/export-query-results-to-a-csv.md)
- [Extracting Nested JSON Data](postgres/extracting-nested-json-data.md)
- [Find Duplicate Records In Table Without Unique Id](postgres/find-duplicate-records-in-table-without-unique-id.md)
- [Find Records That Contain Duplicate Values](postgres/find-records-that-contain-duplicate-values.md)
- [Find Records That Have Multiple Associated Records](postgres/find-records-that-have-multiple-associated-records.md)
- [Find The Data Directory](postgres/find-the-data-directory.md)

View File

@@ -0,0 +1,45 @@
# Find Duplicate Records In Table Without Unique Id
I recently came across a couple methods for listing out instances of duplicate
records in a table where the table doesn't have an explicit unique identifier.
Here is [a post](find-records-that-contain-duplicate-values.md) that explains
how to do this when a unique identifier is present.
If the table doesn't have an explicit primary key or other uniquely identifying
value, then we'll have to get some help from [PostgreSQL's internal system
columns](https://www.postgresql.org/docs/current/ddl-system-columns.html) —
namely the `ctid`.
The `ctid` is:
> The physical location of the row version within its table.
Let's use the example of the `mailing_list` table with potential duplicate
`email` values.
Here is the [first approach](https://stackoverflow.com/a/26773018/535590):
```sql
delete from mailing_list
where ctid not in (
select min(ctid)
from mailing_list
group by email
);
```
This uses a subquery to find the first occurrence of every unique email and
then deletes the rest. The `ctid` is the unique value that we can call the
`min` aggregate on.
A [second approach](https://stackoverflow.com/a/46775289/535590):
```sql
delete from mailing_list ml1
using mailing_list ml2
where ml1.ctid < ml2.ctid
and ml1.email = ml2.email;
```
This uses `delete using` to join the table against itself as a cartesian
product to compare every entry to every other entry.