id
is a primary key.
As far as I remember, this is actually a legal query according to ANSI/ISO SQL.
Grouping by primary key results in a single record in each group which is logically the same as not grouping at all / grouping by all columns, therefore we can select all other columns.
create table t (id int primary key,c1 int,c2 int)
insert into t (id,c1,c2) values (1,2,3),(4,5,6);
select * from t group by id;
+----+----+----+
| id | c1 | c2 |
+----+----+----+
| 1 | 2 | 3 |
+----+----+----+
| 4 | 5 | 6 |
+----+----+----+
Reference given by @a_horse_with_no_name
https://www.postgresql.org/docs/current/static/sql-select.html#SQL-GROUPBY
When GROUP BY is present, or any aggregate functions are present, it
is not valid for the SELECT list expressions to refer to ungrouped
columns except within aggregate functions or when the ungrouped column
is functionally dependent on the grouped columns, since there would
otherwise be more than one possible value to return for an ungrouped
column. A functional dependency exists if the grouped columns (or a
subset thereof) are the primary key of the table containing the
ungrouped column.
While logically we would expect UNIQUE NOT NULL to follow the same behaviour, it applies only for PK (as described in the documentation)
create table t (id int unique not null,c1 int,c2 int);
insert into t (id,c1,c2) values (1,2,3),(4,5,6);
select * from t group by id;
[Code: 0, SQL State: 42803] ERROR: column "t.c1" must appear in the
GROUP BY clause or be used in an aggregate function
table
and the error message.(id)
is the primary key.