I want to update the top 10 values of a column in table. I have three columns; id, account and accountrank. To get the top 10 values I can
Sure, you can use your select statement in a subquery. Generating the rank-order isn't trivial, but here's at least one way to do it. I haven't tested this, but off the top of my head:
update accountrecords
set accountrank =
(select count(*) + 1 from accountrecords r where r.account > account)
where id in (select id from accountrecords order by account desc limit 10);
This has the quirk that if two records have the same value for account, then they will get the same rank. You could consider that a feature... :-)
WITH cte AS (
SELECT id, row_number() OVER (ORDER BY account DESC NULLS LAST) AS rn
FROM accountrecords
ORDER BY account DESC NULLS LAST
LIMIT 10
)
UPDATE accountrecords a
SET accountrank = cte.rn
FROM cte
WHERE cte.id = a.id;
Joining in a table expression is typically faster than correlated subqueries. It is also shorter.
With the window function row_number() distinct numbers are guaranteed. Use rank() (or possibly dense_rank()) if you want rows with equal values for account to share the same number.
Only if there can be NULL values in account, you need to append NULLS LAST for descending sort order, or NULL values sort on top:
If there can be concurrent write access, the above query is subject to a race condition. Consider:
However, if that was the case, the whole concept of hard-coding the top ten would be a dubious approach to begin with.
Use a CTE instead of a plain subquery (like I had at first) to enforce the LIMIT reliably. See links above.