I'm trying to do a relatively complicated query that shows me what tags are used in conjunction with tag A, and it works on sqlfiddle but not on Bigquery. Here is my code:
select `tag_touched`, count(*) / numsessions as ratio
from (select s.`session_id`, `tag_touched`, max(created) as
maxcreated, a.maxcreated_a, ss.numsessions
from [TABLENAME] s join
(select s.`session_id`, max(s.Created) as maxcreated_a
from [TABLENAME] s
where `tag_touched` = 'A'
group by s.`session_id`,
) a
on s.`session_id` = a.`session_id` cross join
(select count(distinct `session_id`) as numsessions
from [TABLENAME]
where `tag_touched` = 'A'
) ss
group by s.`session_id`, s.`tag_touched`, a.maxcreated_a, ss.numsessions
having max(created) > maxcreated_a) s
group by `tag_touched`;
The error is:
Error: Expression '`tag_touched`' is not present in the GROUP BY list
Any ideas on fixing this? Thanks
You have some minor errors in the syntax. Perhaps this will fix the problem:
select `tag_touched`, count(*) / numsessions as ratio
from (select s.`session_id`, s.`tag_touched`,
max(s.created) as maxcreated, a.maxcreated_a, ss.numsessions
from [TABLENAME] s join
(select s.`session_id`, max(s.Created) as maxcreated_a
from [TABLENAME] s
where `tag_touched` = 'A'
group by s.`session_id`
) a
on s.`session_id` = a.`session_id` cross join
(select count(distinct `session_id`) as numsessions
from [TABLENAME]
where `tag_touched` = 'A'
) ss
group by s.`session_id`, s.`tag_touched`, a.maxcreated_a, ss.numsessions
having max(s.created) > maxcreated_a
) s
group by `tag_touched`, numsessions;
Related
I developed a system based in MySQL V8.0 and, unfortunately, I need downgrade for the most used version in web hostings, that is V5.6.
My queries are almost all like this:
SELECT tb_d.*, id_classification
FROM (
SELECT ROW_NUMBER() OVER(PARTITION BY '1' ORDER BY od_category ASC, $order_by_gp_mid) AS row_final, tb_c.*
FROM (
SELECT ROW_NUMBER() OVER(PARTITION BY id_category ORDER BY MOD(`row` * $prime_group, 512)) AS rd_category, tb_b.*
FROM (
SELECT ROW_NUMBER() OVER(PARTITION BY '1' ORDER BY od_category ASC, $order_by_gp_mid) AS `row`, tb_a.*
FROM (
SELECT ROW_NUMBER() OVER (PARTITION BY id_category ORDER BY od_category ASC, tb_x.$order_by_gp_mid) AS rn_category, tb_x.*
FROM (
SELECT
1, od_category, id_category, `group`, category,
id_post, thumbnail, head, visibility, created_datetime, `view`, yeslike, save,
lk_post_category_pic_uvw.fk_pic,
ROUND((yeslike + total_save) / view, 3) AS rank_ratio
FROM tb_category
JOIN (
SELECT fk_post, fk_category, fk_pic
FROM lk_post_category_pic
UNION
SELECT fk_post, `from`, fk_pic
FROM lk_post_model_pic
JOIN tb_model ON tb_model.id_model = lk_post_model_pic.fk_model
WHERE `from` != ''
) AS lk_post_category_pic_uvw ON lk_post_category_pic_uvw.fk_category = tb_category.id_category
JOIN tb_post ON lk_post_category_pic_uvw.fk_post = tb_post.id_post
LEFT JOIN vw_total_save_by_post ON vw_total_save_by_post.fk_post = tb_post.id_post
WHERE visibility = 'show'
) AS tb_x
) AS tb_a
WHERE rn_category <= 35
) AS tb_b
) AS tb_c
WHERE rd_category = 1
) AS tb_d
JOIN lk_post_classification_pic ON tb_d.id_post = lk_post_classification_pic.fk_post
JOIN tb_classification ON lk_post_classification_pic.fk_classification = tb_classification.id_classification
Being that the variable $order_by_gp_mid can assuming these values:
$order_by_gp_mid = 'created_datetime DESC';
$order_by_gp_mid = 'rank_ratio DESC';
$order_by_gp_mid = '`view` DESC';
$order_by_gp_mid = 'created_datetime DESC';
$order_by_gp_mid = 'created_datetime ASC';
So, the biggest problem here are the lines ROW_NUMBER() OVER(PARTITION BY blabla...).
I need rewrite this queries, and so many others too, for MySQL 5.6.
I already read many topics about here in stackoverflow but, I don't how to do it because my queries are very complexs.
So, I don't know what to do anymore, I'm absolutely exhausted of computer programming.
I have 3 tables (stars mach the ids from the table before):
product:
prod_id* prod_name prod_a_id prod_b_id prod_user
keywords:
key_id** key_word key_prod* kay_country
data:
id dat_id** dat_date dat_rank_a dat_traffic_a dat_rank_b dat_traffic_b
I want to run a query (in a function that gets a $key_id) that outputs all these columns but only for the last 2 dates(dat_date) from the 'data' table for the key_id inserted - so that for every key_word - I have the two last dat_dates + all the other variables included in my SQL query:
So... This is what I have so far. and I don't know how to get only the MAX vars. I tried using "max(dat_date)" in different ways that didn't work.
SELECT prod_id, prod_name, prod_a_id, prod_b_id, key_id, key_word, kay_country, dat_date, dat_rank_a, dat_rank_b, dat_traffic_a, dat_traffic_b
FROM keywords
INNER JOIN data
ON keywords.key_id = data.dat_id
INNER JOIN prods
ON keywords.key_prod = prods.prod_id
Is there a possability to do this with only one query?
EDIT (FOR IgorM):
public function newnew() {
$query = $this->db->query('WITH CTE AS
(
SELECT *,
ROW_NUMBER() OVER (PARTITION BY dat_id ORDER BY dat_date ASC) AS
RowNo FROM data
)
SELECT *
FROM CTE
INNER JOIN keywords
ON keywords.key_id = CTE.dat_id
INNER JOIN prods
ON keywords.key_prod = prods.prod_id
WHERE RowNo < 3
');
$result = $query->result();
return $result;
}
This is the error on the output:
You have an error in your SQL syntax; check the manual that corresponds to your MySQL server version for the right syntax to use near 'CTE AS ( SELECT *, ROW_NUMBER() OVER (' at line 1
WITH CTE AS ( SELECT *, ROW_NUMBER() OVER (PARTITION BY dat_id ORDER BY dat_date ASC) AS RowNo FROM data ) SELECT * FROM CTE INNER JOIN keywords ON keywords.key_id = CTE.dat_id INNER JOIN prods ON keywords.key_prod = prods.prod_id WHERE RowNo < 3
For SQL
WITH CTE AS
(
SELECT *,
ROW_NUMBER() OVER (PARTITION BY dat_id ORDER BY dat_date ASC) AS
RowNo FROM data
)
SELECT *
FROM CTE
INNER JOIN keywords
ON keywords.key_id = CTE.dat_id
INNER JOIN prods
ON keywords.key_prod = prods.prod_id
WHERE RowNo < 3
For MySQL (not tested)
SET #row_number:=0;
SET #dat_id = '';
SELECT *,
#row_number:=CASE WHEN #dat_id=dat_id THEN #row_number+1 ELSE 1 END AS row_number,
#dat_id:=dat_id AS dat_id_row_count
FROM data d
INNER JOIN keywords
ON keywords.key_id = d.dat_id
INNER JOIN prods
ON keywords.key_prod = prods.prod_id
WHERE d.row_number < 3
The other approach is self joining. I don't want to take credit for somebody else's job, so please look on the following example:
ROW_NUMBER() in MySQL
Look for the following there:
SELECT a.i, a.j, (
SELECT count(*) from test b where a.j >= b.j AND a.i = b.i
) AS row_number FROM test a
If you only want to do this for one key_id at a time (as alluded to in your responses to other answers) and only want two rows, you can just do:
SELECT p.prod_id,
p.prod_name,
p.prod_a_id,
p.prod_b_id,
k.key_id,
k.key_word,
k.key_country,
d.dat_date,
d.dat_rank_a,
d.dat_rank_b,
d.dat_traffic_a,
d.dat_traffic_b
FROM keywords k
JOIN data d
ON k.key_id = d.dat_id
JOIN prods p
ON k.key_prod = p.prod_id
WHERE k.key_id = :key_id /* Bind in key id */
ORDER BY d.dat_date DESC
LIMIT 2;
Whether you want this depends on your data structure and whether there is more than one key/prod combination per date.
Another option limiting just the data rows would be:
SELECT p.prod_id,
p.prod_name,
p.prod_a_id,
p.prod_b_id,
k.key_id,
k.key_word,
k.key_country,
d.dat_date,
d.dat_rank_a,
d.dat_rank_b,
d.dat_traffic_a,
d.dat_traffic_b
FROM keywords k
JOIN (
SELECT dat_id,
dat_date,
dat_rank_a,
dat_rank_b,
dat_traffic_a,
dat_traffic_b
FROM data
WHERE dat_id = :key_id /* Bind in key id */
ORDER BY dat_date DESC
LIMIT 2
) d
ON k.key_id = d.dat_id
JOIN prods p
ON k.key_prod = p.prod_id;
If you want some kind of grouped results for all the keywords, you'll need to look at the other answers.
I think a window function is the best way to go. without knowing a lot about the structure of the data you can try a subquery of what you are trying to restrict and then joining that to the rest of the data. Then within the where clause restrict the rows you pull back.
select p.prod_id, p.prod_name, p.prod_a_id, p.prod_b_id,
t.key_id, t.key_word, t.kay_country, t.dat_date,
t.dat_rank_a, t.dat_rank_b, t.dat_traffic_a, t.dat_traffic_b
from
(
select
k.key_id, k.key_word, k.kay_country, d.dat_date, d.dat_rank_a,
d.dat_rank_b, d.dat_traffic_a, d.dat_traffic_b,
row_number() over (partition by dat_id order by dat_date desc) as 'RowNum'
from keywords as k
inner join
data as d on k.key_id = d.dat_id
) as t
inner join
prods as p on t.key_prod = p.prod_id
where tmp.RowNum <=2
This is a "groupwise max" problem. Reference. CTE does not exist in MySQL.
I'm not totally clear on how your tables are linked, but here is a stab:
SELECT
*
FROM
( SELECT #prev := '', #n := 0 ) init
JOIN
( SELECT #n := if(k.key_id != #prev, 1, #n + 1) AS n,
#prev := k.key_id,
d.*, k.*, p.*
FROM data d
JOIN keywords k ON k.key_id = d.dat_id
JOIN prods p ON k.key_prod = p.prod_id
ORDER BY
k.key_id ASC,
d.dat_date ASC
) x
WHERE n <= 2
ORDER BY k.key_id, n;
you can use this query:
select prod_id, prod_name, prod_a_id, prod_b_id, key_id, key_word,
kay_country, dat_date, dat_rank_a, dat_rank_b, dat_traffic_a, dat_traffic_b
from keywords where dat_date in (
SELECT MAX(dat_date) FROM keywords temp_1
where temp_1.prod_id = keywords.prod_id
union all
SELECT MAX(dat_date) FROM keywords
WHERE dat_date NOT IN (SELECT MAX(dat_date ) FROM keywords temp_2 where
temp_2.prod_id = keywords.prod_id)
)
In the following query I'm having a problem when it comes to returning the right value for count2.
What I need is to get the number of rows from table2 which could easily be done by using a derived table t:
SELECT name,
(SELECT COUNT(*) FROM `table1`) AS count1,
(SELECT COUNT(*) FROM (
SELECT COUNT(*) FROM `table2` t2) WHERE t2.user = prf.user)
) t AS count2,
(SELECT SUM(a) FROM `table3`) AS count3
FROM `profiles` prf
WHERE 1=1
AND prf.user = 1
The problem is that the WHERE t2.user = prf.user statement fails as the prf table is outside the subquery's scope.
How can I achieve the above?
EDIT: I'm adding the actual query in case it's helpful for getting a better grasp:
SELECT PRF.BranchID, PRF.user_id, CONCAT_WS(" ",PRF.lastname,PRF.firstname) Synergatis,
( SELECT COUNT(*) FROM Actions A JOIN Requests R ON R.RequestID=A.RequestID WHERE A.ActionStatus = 302 AND A.UserOwner = PRF.user_id AND A.ActionDate BETWEEN '2015-06-01' AND '2015-06-10' ) AS energeies,
( SELECT COUNT(DISTINCT RPP.RequestID) FROM VW_Xartofylakio_Synergati VV JOIN Requests_Prop RPP ON RPP.PropertyID = VV.PropertyID JOIN Requests R ON R.RequestID = RPP.RequestID WHERE VV.CurrUsr = PRF.user_id AND R.ModifyTime BETWEEN '2015-06-01' AND '2015-06-10' ) AS zitiseis_eidikes,
( SELECT COUNT(DISTINCT(CustomerID)) FROM Demo_Orders_M WHERE DemoOrderStatus=253 AND USER=PRF.user_id AND DemoOrderDate BETWEEN '2015-06-01' AND '2015-06-10' ) AS endiaferomenoi,
( SELECT COUNT(*) AS cnt FROM Demo_Orders_M DOM JOIN Actions A ON DOM.DemoOrderID = A.DemoOrderID WHERE DOM.User = PRF.user_id AND DOM.DemoOrderStatus = 253 AND A.ActionDate BETWEEN '2015-06-01 14:56:19' AND '2015-06-30 14:56:19' GROUP BY DOM.CustomerID, DOM.User HAVING COUNT(*) > 1 ) AS anakykl_endiaf,
( SELECT COUNT(*) FROM Demo_Orders_M DOM WHERE DOM.`User`=PRF.user_id AND DemoOrderStatus = 253 AND DOM.DemoOrderDate BETWEEN '2015-06-01' AND '2015-06-10' ) AS epideixeis,
( SELECT COUNT(DISTINCT(DOD.PropertyID)) AS PropertyID FROM Demo_Orders_M DOM JOIN Demo_Orders_D DOD ON DOM.DemoOrderID = DOD.DemoOrderID JOIN Actions A ON DOD.DemoOrderID = A.DemoOrderID WHERE DOM.DemoOrderStatus = 253 AND DOM.User = PRF.user_id AND A.ActionDate BETWEEN '2015-06-01' AND '2015-06-10' ) AS monadika_akinita
FROM tbl_profiles PRF
WHERE 1=1
AND PRF.user_id IN (
SELECT a.user_id FROM tbl_profiles a WHERE a.user_id IN ('248','1159','486','183')
OR a.GroupID IN (SELECT b.GroupID FROM L_Groups b WHERE b.ManagerID IN ('248','1159','486','183'))
)
ORDER BY PRF.user_id
The subquery I'm referring to is the one that returns the result as anakykl_endiaf.
I suspect it is not because of prf table, it is because of t2 table... There are no restrictions to use outer alias in inner subqueries because there are such a thing like correlated subquery. Your problem is that you have the opposite case here: you are referring inner alias in outer query.
(SELECT COUNT(*)
FROM (SELECT COUNT(*) FROM `table2` t2) WHERE t2.user = prf.user)
Why are you selecting count twice here? You can change to this:
(SELECT COUNT(*)
FROM (SELECT COUNT(*) FROM `table2` t2 WHERE t2.user = prf.user))
or this:
(SELECT COUNT(*)
FROM `table2` t2 WHERE t2.user = prf.user)
A suggestion to try.
You have sub queries in the SELECT, and in this case they must each only return a single row. For some reason (which we can't really tell without test data) one of these is returning more than 1 row, hence failing.
As an interim step, change the query to join against the sub queries, which should make it more obvious when there are duplicates (and may also be quite a bit more efficient, depending on the data).
Something like this (not tested so probably a few typos):-
SELECT PRF.BranchID,
PRF.user_id,
CONCAT_WS(" ",PRF.lastname,PRF.firstname) Synergatis,
ar.energeies,
vrr.zitiseis_eidikes,
m.endiaferomenoi,
ae.anakykl_endiaf,
d.epideixeis,
ddd.monadika_akinita
FROM tbl_profiles PRF
LEFT OUTER JOIN
(
SELECT A.UserOwner AS DomUser, COUNT(*) AS energeies
FROM Actions A
JOIN Requests R ON R.RequestID=A.RequestID
WHERE A.ActionStatus = 302
AND A.ActionDate BETWEEN '2015-06-01' AND '2015-06-10'
GROUP BY A.UserOwner
) ar
ON ar.DomUser = PRF.user_id
LEFT OUTER JOIN
(
SELECT VV.CurrUsr AS DomUser, COUNT(DISTINCT RPP.RequestID) AS zitiseis_eidikes
FROM VW_Xartofylakio_Synergati VV
JOIN Requests_Prop RPP ON RPP.PropertyID = VV.PropertyID
JOIN Requests R ON R.RequestID = RPP.RequestID
WHERE R.ModifyTime BETWEEN '2015-06-01' AND '2015-06-10'
GROUP BY VV.DomUser
) vrr
ON vrr.DomUser = PRF.user_id
LEFT OUTER JOIN
(
SELECT `USER` AS DomUser, COUNT(DISTINCT(CustomerID)) AS endiaferomenoi
FROM Demo_Orders_M
WHERE DemoOrderStatus=253
AND DemoOrderDate BETWEEN '2015-06-01' AND '2015-06-10'
GROUP BY DomUser
) m
ON PRF.user_id = m.DomUser
LEFT OUTER JOIN
(
SELECT DOM.CustomerID, DOM.`User` AS DomUser, COUNT(*) AS anakykl_endiaf
FROM Demo_Orders_M DOM
JOIN Actions A ON DOM.DemoOrderID = A.DemoOrderID
WHERE DOM.DemoOrderStatus = 253
AND A.ActionDate BETWEEN '2015-06-01 14:56:19' AND '2015-06-30 14:56:19'
GROUP BY DOM.CustomerID, DOM.DomUser
HAVING COUNT(*) > 1
) ae
ON PRF.user_id = ae.DomUser
LEFT OUTER JOIN
(
SELECT DOM.`User` AS DomUser, COUNT(*) AS epideixeis
FROM Demo_Orders_M DOM
WHERE DemoOrderStatus = 253
AND DOM.DemoOrderDate BETWEEN '2015-06-01' AND '2015-06-10'
GROUP BY DOM.DomUser
) d
EDIT
If you just want a count of the number of customerID fields for a user in the anakykl_endiaf field then change it to doing a count of distinct customerIDs. Ie, for the above query I have done change it to:-
LEFT OUTER JOIN
(
SELECT DOM.`User` AS DomUser, COUNT(DISTINCT DOM.CustomerID) AS anakykl_endiaf
FROM Demo_Orders_M DOM
JOIN Actions A ON DOM.DemoOrderID = A.DemoOrderID
WHERE DOM.DemoOrderStatus = 253
AND A.ActionDate BETWEEN '2015-06-01 14:56:19' AND '2015-06-30 14:56:19'
GROUP BY DOM.DomUser
HAVING COUNT(*) > 1
) ae
I'm having a bit of a problem with the following MySQL query and I can't find the source of it.
MySQL tells me that
SQLSTATE[42S21]: Column already exists: 1060 Duplicate column name
'annonce_dispo_id'
SELECT MAX(max_price) AS `max_price`,
COUNT(*) AS `nb_annonces`,
SUM(nb_dispo) AS `nb_dispo`
FROM
(SELECT `annonce`.`id`,
CEIL(MAX(price)*1.16) AS `max_price`,
COUNT(DISTINCT annonce.id) AS `nb_annonces`,
COUNT(annonce_dispoo.annonce_dispo_id) AS `nb_dispo`,
`annonce_dispo1`.*,
`annonce_dispo2`.*
FROM `annonce`
LEFT JOIN `annonce_dispo` AS `annonce_dispoo` ON (annonce_dispoo.annonceId = annonce.id
AND STR_TO_DATE(annonce_dispoo.dispo_date, '%d/%m/%Y') >= CURDATE())
INNER JOIN `annonce_dispo` AS `annonce_dispo1` ON annonce.id = annonce_dispo1.annonceId
INNER JOIN `annonce_dispo` AS `annonce_dispo2` ON annonce.id = annonce_dispo2.annonceId
WHERE ((annonce.city IN
(SELECT `cities`.`id`
FROM `cities`
WHERE (cities.label LIKE 'lyon%'))
OR annonce.zipcode = 'lyon')
OR (annonce.city LIKE '28674'
OR annonce.zipcode = '28674'))
AND (annonce_dispo1.dispo_date = '27/05/2014')
AND (annonce_dispo1.disponibility = 'available')
AND (annonce_dispo2.dispo_date = '31/05/2014')
AND (annonce_dispo2.disponibility = 'available')
AND (annonce.visible = 1)
AND (annonce.completed = 1)
GROUP BY `annonce`.`id` HAVING (nb_dispo >= 1)) AS `t`
I thought gave a different alias for the table in each JOIN I use them in, and can't really put my finger on what else is possible to output such an error.
Don't select annonce_dispo1.* and annonce_dispo2.* in your subquery, duplicated column names are being returned. Instead select the fields you need and alias accordingly.
SELECT MAX(max_price) AS `max_price`,
COUNT(*) AS `nb_annonces`,
SUM(nb_dispo) AS `nb_dispo`
FROM
(SELECT `annonce`.`id`,
CEIL(MAX(price)*1.16) AS `max_price`,
COUNT(DISTINCT annonce.id) AS `nb_annonces`,
COUNT(annonce_dispoo.annonce_dispo_id) AS `nb_dispo`,
`annonce_dispo1`.field, `annonce_dispo1`.otherfield,
`annonce_dispo1`.field as field2, `annonce_dispo1`.otherfield as otherfield2
FROM `annonce`
LEFT JOIN `annonce_dispo` AS `annonce_dispoo` ON (annonce_dispoo.annonceId = annonce.id
AND STR_TO_DATE(annonce_dispoo.dispo_date, '%d/%m/%Y') >= CURDATE())
INNER JOIN `annonce_dispo` AS `annonce_dispo1` ON annonce.id = annonce_dispo1.annonceId
INNER JOIN `annonce_dispo` AS `annonce_dispo2` ON annonce.id = annonce_dispo2.annonceId
WHERE ((annonce.city IN
(SELECT `cities`.`id`
FROM `cities`
WHERE (cities.label LIKE 'lyon%'))
OR annonce.zipcode = 'lyon')
OR (annonce.city LIKE '28674'
OR annonce.zipcode = '28674'))
AND (annonce_dispo1.dispo_date = '27/05/2014')
AND (annonce_dispo1.disponibility = 'available')
AND (annonce_dispo2.dispo_date = '31/05/2014')
AND (annonce_dispo2.disponibility = 'available')
AND (annonce.visible = 1)
AND (annonce.completed = 1)
GROUP BY `annonce`.`id` HAVING (nb_dispo >= 1)) AS `t`
See here for an example that doesn't work:
http://sqlfiddle.com/#!2/9bb13/1
The problem is that you are selecting all columns in the tables annonce_dispo1 and annonce_dispo2.
The fact that you have attributed different table names doesn't mean that there aren't duplicate column names.
I mean, you should use [Table name].[column name]
Example:
(SELECT `annonce`.`id`,
CEIL(MAX(price)*1.16) AS `max_price`,
COUNT(DISTINCT annonce.id) AS `nb_annonces`,
COUNT(annonce_dispoo.annonce_dispo_id) AS `nb_dispo`,
`annonce_dispo1`.annonce_dispo_id AS `column1`,
`annonce_dispo2`.annonce_dispo_id AS `column2`
I hope I've helped
This is my MySQL select statement, where I am trying to do an intersection:
SELECT id
FROM
(SELECT id
FROM members WHERE id!=15 AND `last name` = `last name` AND (`first name` = "James") AND `email address` = `email address` AND `mobile number` = `mobile number` AND type_id = type_id AND active = active
) AS A
INNER JOIN
SELECT id
FROM
(SELECT DISTINCT m.members_id as id
FROM map m
WHERE m.members_id!=15 AND (((SELECT count(*) FROM tasks) = 0) OR (((SELECT count(*) FROM checklist WHERE map_id=m.id) / (SELECT count(*) FROM tasks)) * 100 >= 0 AND ((SELECT count(*) FROM checklist WHERE map_id=m.id) / (SELECT count(*) FROM tasks)) * 100 <= 100)) AND m.`topic` = m.`topic` AND m.`location` = m.`location` AND m.`country` = m.`country` AND m.`city` = m.`city` AND m.`organization` = m.`organization`
) AS B
USING (id)
This is the example intersect code I saw from
SELECT DISTINCT value FROM table_a
INNER JOIN table_b
USING (value);
From: Alternative to Intersect in MySQL
However I am getting a syntax error near "inner join". Does anyone know whats wrong here?
Few things:
Your Where clause comes after the join - which is likely your problem
Hard to understand what is going on with some of the field names you are using
Going to try and fix your formatting a bit and provide other advice, but that is hard to read.
Just looking at making your query look like the one you are using as a template I would expect the result to be something like:
SELECT id
FROM
(SELECT id
FROM members WHERE id!=15 AND `last name` = `last name` AND (`first name` = "James") AND `email address` = `email address` AND `mobile number` = `mobile number` AND type_id = type_id AND active = active
) AS A
INNER JOIN
(SELECT DISTINCT m.members_id as id
FROM map m
WHERE m.members_id!=15 AND (((SELECT count(*) FROM tasks) = 0) OR (((SELECT count(*) FROM checklist WHERE map_id=m.id) / (SELECT count(*) FROM tasks)) * 100 >= 0 AND ((SELECT count(*) FROM checklist WHERE map_id=m.id) / (SELECT count(*) FROM tasks)) * 100 <= 100)) AND m.`topic` = m.`topic` AND m.`location` = m.`location` AND m.`country` = m.`country` AND m.`city` = m.`city` AND m.`organization` = m.`organization`
) AS B
USING (id)
Removing that select id from after the inner join. That said can you simplify your query and see if you can get that working first - you have a lot of conditional logic in your sub-selects which makes it hard to test in a fiddle, etc. Maybe post a fiddle for an example of your data and query?