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Home/ Questions/Q 9266447
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: June 18, 20262026-06-18T14:19:15+00:00 2026-06-18T14:19:15+00:00

I’ve created a SQL table with a field X and a field DATE. I

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I’ve created a SQL table with a field X and a field DATE. I would like to compute the sum of X where DATE < d. I’ve two possibilities :

  • Create a new field, “sum of X”, which represents the sum of X when date < date[field]
  • Compute the sum of X “manually”, with a SQL request

Is there a method which is always superior ? Or, if not, I assume that it depends on the table size. What is the approximate size that equalizes the two methods ?

Thank you very much.

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-06-18T14:19:16+00:00Added an answer on June 18, 2026 at 2:19 pm

    Is there a method which is always superior ?

    No. But in general, stick with the simplest solution until you find it doesn’t work any more. The simplest solution in this case is to calculate the derived field each time you need it.

    Or, if not, I assume that it depends on the table size.

    Yes. And the number of insertions vs. number of reads. And whether dates are monotonically increasing or not. And the space (memory/disk) vs. time (processing power) tradeoff of your system and its requirements. And probably a good number of other things too.

    What is the approximate size that equalizes the two methods ?

    How long is a piece of string? Too many other variables to answer that.

    To repeat: stick with simple until forced to do otherwise. Maintaining cached values introduces complexity and corner cases: what are your transactional boundaries? What happens if you add a new row? That presumably triggers a subsequent transaction to detect and update the affected rows. What happens if you then roll back the original transaction?

    That’s a lot more logic. With much more potential to go wrong. Stick with YAGNI until you find you do.

    hth.

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