Order By
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👨💼 Ok ok, hear me out. It's awesome that we can search by our user's names and
usernames. But what would be more awesome is if the users were sorted by how
active they've been. We don't want to have a user who hasn't added or updated
a note in months or years coming up ahead of a user who adds and updates notes
on a daily basis.
We want our users to find the most active users. So let's sort things by how
active they've been. We'll do this by identifying each user's most recently
updated note. We'll use the
updatedAt
of the most recently updated note. And
then sort the users we've found by that field for each of them.🦉
Order By
can be pretty straightforward:SELECT id, title, content from Review ORDER BY updatedAt LIMIT 30;
But it can also be more complicated using a nested query, which is what we'll
need to do:
SELECT
id,
name,
content
from
Ship as ship
ORDER BY
(
SELECT
avgRating
FROM
(
SELECT
ship.id,
AVG(shipReview.rating) AS avgRating
FROM
Ship ship
INNER JOIN ShipReview shipReview ON shipReview.subjectId = ship.id
GROUP BY
ship.id
) AS shipRatings
WHERE
shipRatings.id = ship.id
) DESC
LIMIT
50
👨💼 Luckily, our
ORDER BY
won't be quite as complicated. Nested queries like
this are one example of the power of SQL!It's easiest to think of the nested query on its own before combining it with
the parent query. So consider the requirement:
- Select
updatedAt
- From the
Note
model - Where the
ownerId
matches theuser.id
- Order by the
updatedAt
descending (DESC
) - Get only the first one (
LIMIT
)
Once you have that, then you can wrap that in an
ORDER BY
and you're golden.Remember, ChatGPT can help guide you on this one
or if you really get stuck you can check
the diff tab.
To test this one out, perform a search, then open the second user, and edit
one of their notes. Go back and perform the same search and that user should
show up on top.