I've been stumped with some SQL where I've got several rows of data, and I want to subtract a row from the previous row and have it repeat all the way down.
So here is the table:
CREATE TABLE foo (
id,
length
)
INSERT INTO foo (id,length) VALUES(1,1090)
INSERT INTO foo (id,length) VALUES(2,888)
INSERT INTO foo (id,length) VALUES(3,545)
INSERT INTO foo (id,length) VALUES(4,434)
INSERT INTO foo (id,length) VALUES(5,45)
I want the results to show a third column called difference which is one row subtracting from the one below with the final row subtracting from zero.
+------+------------------------+
| id |length | difference |
+------+------------------------+
| 1 | 1090 | 202 |
| 2 | 888 | 343 |
| 3 | 545 | 111 |
| 4 | 434 | 389 |
| 5 | 45 | 45 |
I've tried a self join but I'm not exactly sure how to limit the results instead of having it cycle through itself. I can't depend that the id value will be sequential for a given result set so I'm not using that value. I could extend the schema to include some kind of sequential value.
This is what I've tried:
SELECT id, f.length, f2.length, (f.length - f2.length) AS difference
FROM foo f, foo f2
Thank you for the assist.
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