Delete all but top n from database table in SQL
I would select ID column(s) the set of rows that you want to keep into a temp table or table variable. Then delete all the rows that do not exist in the temp table. The syntax mentioned by another user:
DELETE FROM Table WHERE ID NOT IN (SELECT TOP 10 ID FROM Table)
Has a potential problem. The "SELECT TOP 10" query will be executed for each row in the table, which could be a huge performance hit. You want to avoid making the same query over and over again.
This syntax should work, based what you listed as your original SQL statement:
create table #nuke(NukeID int)
insert into #nuke(Nuke) select top 1000 id from article
delete article where not exists (select 1 from nuke where Nukeid = id)
drop table #nuke
DELETE FROM Table WHERE ID NOT IN (SELECT TOP 10 ID FROM Table)
Edit:
Chris brings up a good performance hit since the TOP 10 query would be run for each row. If this is a one time thing, then it may not be as big of a deal, but if it is a common thing, then I did look closer at it.
Future reference for those of use who don't use MS SQL.
In PostgreSQL use ORDER BY
and LIMIT
instead of TOP
.
DELETE FROM table
WHERE id NOT IN (SELECT id FROM table ORDER BY id LIMIT n);
MySQL -- well...
Error -- This version of MySQL does not yet support 'LIMIT & IN/ALL/ANY/SOME subquery'
Not yet I guess.