The Table:
(`post_id`, `forum_id`, `topic_id`, `post_time`)
(79, 8, 4, '2012-11-19 06:58:08');
(80, 3, 3, '2012-11-19 06:58:42'),
(81, 9, 9, '2012-11-19 06:59:04'),
(82, 11, 6, '2012-11-19 16:05:39'),
(83, 9, 9, '2012-11-19 16:07:46'),
(84, 9, 11, '2012-11-19 16:09:33'),
The Query:
SELECT post_id, forum_id, topic_id FROM posts
GROUP BY topic_id
ORDER BY post_time DESC
LIMIT 5
The Results:
[0] => [post_id] => 84 [forum_id] => 9 [topic_id] => 11
[1] => [post_id] => 82 [forum_id] => 11 [topic_id] => 6
[2] => [post_id] => 81 [forum_id] => 9 [topic_id] => 9
[3] => [post_id] => 80 [forum_id] => 3 [topic_id] => 3
[4] => [post_id] => 79 [forum_id] => 8 [topic_id] => 4
The Problem:
How to rewrite the query so that it returns post_id -> 83 instead of post_id -> 81 ?
They both have the same forum and topic ids, but post_id -> 81 has an older date than post_id -> 83.
But it seems that Group By gets the 'first' record and not the 'newest' one.
I tried changing the query to
SELECT post_id, forum_id, topic_id, MAX(post_time)
but that returns both post_id 81 and 83
See Question&Answers more detail:
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