You can use a SEDE query to find your longest posts. Here is what I used:
DECLARE @UserId int = ##UserId:int##;
SELECT TOP 3 Id [Post Link], LEN(Body), Body
FROM posts
WHERE OwnerUserId = @UserId
ORDER BY LEN(Body) DESC
The DECLARE
is so it can take a user ID. You can supply your own or any other user's just next to the Run Query button.
From there it selects the top 3 posts - questions or answers alike, ordered by post length where the poster was the user ID supplied. Id [Post Link]
will automatically give you a link to the post (see Magic Columns section here).
If you start composing a query, you'd be able to see the table schema, so you can add more information if you need it or modify the query. For example, if you want questions or answers only, you can use the PostTypeId
column where 1
is a question and 2
is an answer. You can further do joins or different aggregation or breakdown of the data, if needed.
See the SEDE tutorial here.
There are two things to be aware of:
- The data is not real-time. It's updated every week on Sunday, so on Monday it is going to be the most up-to-date.
- You will not be able to query for deleted posts. Those reside in the
PostsWithDeleted
table, however only some of the data is publicly available, other gets removed. The removed data includes the OwnerUserId
(who posted it) as well as the Body
column, so you will not be able to find neither the longest deleted post, nor even your own deleted posts (or any particular user's).
user:me
if you were to remember the contextuser:me is:answer created:1m.. [tag-name] keywords
will give all your answers from last 1 month with the tagtag-name
includes thekeyword