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Get the N smallest values from a column. The min_n() functions give the same results as the regular SQL query SELECT ... ORDER BY ... LIMIT n. But unlike the SQL query, they can be composed and combined like other aggregate hyperfunctions. To get the N largest values, use max_n(). To get the N smallest values with accompanying data, use min_n_by(). This function group uses the two-step aggregation pattern. In addition to the usual aggregate function min_n, it also includes accessors and rollup functions.

Two-step aggregation

This group of functions uses the two-step aggregation pattern. Rather than calculating the final result in one step, you first create an intermediate aggregate by using the aggregate function. Then, use any of the accessors on the intermediate aggregate to calculate a final result. You can also roll up multiple intermediate aggregates with the rollup functions. The two-step aggregation pattern has several advantages:
  1. More efficient because multiple accessors can reuse the same aggregate
  2. Easier to reason about performance, because aggregation is separate from final computation
  3. Easier to understand when calculations can be rolled up into larger intervals, especially in window functions and continuous aggregates
  4. Perform retrospective analysis even when underlying data is dropped, because the intermediate aggregate stores extra information not available in the final result
To learn more, see the blog post on two-step aggregates.

Samples

This example assumes that you have a table of stock trades in this format:
CREATE TABLE stock_sales(
    ts TIMESTAMPTZ,
    symbol TEXT,
    price FLOAT,
    volume INT
);
You can query for the 10 smallest transactions each day:
WITH t as (
    SELECT
        time_bucket('1 day'::interval, ts) as day,
        min_n(price * volume, 10) AS daily_min
    FROM stock_sales
    GROUP BY time_bucket('1 day'::interval, ts)
)
SELECT
    day, into_array(daily_min)
FROM t;

Available functions

Aggregate

  • min_n(): construct an aggregate that keeps track of the smallest values passed through it

Accessors

  • into_values(): return the N lowest values seen by the aggregate
  • into_array(): return the N lowest values seen by the aggregate as an array

Rollup

  • rollup(): combine multiple MinN aggregates