Oracle
 sql >> Base de données >  >> RDS >> Oracle

SQL - Remplir les dates qui n'ont pas de résultats

Selon la façon dont vous souhaitez les créer, vous pouvez soit créer une table de calendrier ou générer dynamiquement les lignes en utilisant Oracle connect by syntaxe.

with the_dates as (
  select max(trunc(Create_Dtime)) as max_date
       , min(trunc(Create_Dtime)) as min_date
    from player 
         )
  , generator as (
  select min_date + level as the_date
    from the_dates
 connect by level <= max_date
         )
select g.the_date, count(trunc(p.Create_Dtime))
  from generator g
  left outer join player p
    on g.the_date = trunc(p.Create_Dtime)
 group by g.the_date
 order by g.the_date desc

Si vous descendez l'option de table de calendrier, c'est un peu plus propre :

with the_dates as (
  select max(trunc(Create_Dtime)) as max_date
       , min(trunc(Create_Dtime)) as min_date
    from player 
         )
select c.the_date, count(trunc(p.Create_Dtime))
  from calender c
  join the_dates td
    on c.the_date between td.min_date and td.max_date
  left outer join join player p
    on c.the_date = trunc(p.Create_Dtime)
 group by c.the_date
 order by c.the_date

Ou, venez de remarquer vos contraintes de date :

with the_dates as (
  select to_date('07-05-2012','dd-mm-yyyy') + level as the_date
    from dual
 connect by level <= trunc(to_date('07-05-2012','dd-mm-yyyy') - sysdate)
         )
 select td.the_date, count(trunc(p.create_dtime))
   from the_dates td
   left outer join player p
     on td.the_date = trunc(p.create_dtime)
  group by td.the_date
  order by td.the_date

Pour tout cela, je recommanderais un index sur trunc(create_dtime) sur votre player tableau.