How to create the inner query wtih 5 different tables mysql - mysql

Having 5 tables
Table a_dates = id,
Table b_types = id, a_date_id, c_type_id,
Table c_types = id, name,
Table d_profiles = id, name, profile_type
Table e_ps = id, a_date_id, d_profile_id
From a_dates Need to get b_types,...then from b_types needs c_types name,... Then compare c_types name with d_profiles name and get d_profiles id.... if equals then create a records in e_ps with a_date_id, d_profile_id.
Could any one please help me in getting the query from inner join.
I tried like, it is incomplete query
INSERT INTO e_ps(id,a_date_id,a_date_type,d_profile_id,c_id)
SELECT '',a.id,'A',dp.id,'67' FROM d_profiles dp
INNER JOIN a_dates a ON {HERE I NEED NAME MATCHING WITH c_types name} = dp.name and dp.profile_type = 'A'
INNER JOIN a_dates ON a.id = a_dates.id
LEFT OUTER JOIN e_ps eps ON eps.a_date_type = 'A' AND eps.a_date_id = a_dates.id
WHERE eps.a_date_id IS NULL

This seems to be a relatively simple JOIN:-
INSERT INTO e_ps(id, a_date_id, d_profile_id)
SELECT NULL, a_dates.id, d_profiles.id
FROM a_dates
INNER JOIN b_types ON a_dates.id = b_types.a_date_id
INNER JOIN c_types ON b.c_type_id = c.id
INNER JOIN d_profiles ON c_types.name = d_profiles.name
With joins there are several types, and I suspect you are getting confused. Briefly:-
With an INNER JOIN it looks for a match that is on BOTH tables. If no
match the no record is returned.
With a LEFT OUTER JOIN it takes a record from the table on the left
and looks for a match on the table on the right. If a match great,
but if not then it still brings a row back but the columns from the
table on the right just have values of NULL.
A RIGHT OUTER JOIN is very much the same, just with the tables
reversed (most people including me avoid using this as it has no
advantages most of the time but just makes things confusing).
With a FULL OUTER JOIN it gets the records from both side, whether
they match or not. If they match then the columns from both are
returned, if not matched then the columns from one are returned. Not
that MySQL does not support a FULL OUTER JOIN (although there are
ways to emulate it).
A CROSS JOIN joins every combination of 2 tables. These are used when
there is no common column to match on but you want all combinations.
For example if you wanted a table of all employees and all days of
the week for each employee you would cross join a table of days of
the week against a table of employees (then for useful data you might
LEFT OUTER JOIN a table of holidays to the result).

Related

SQL Left Join a Table on a Left Joined Table

Iam currently trying to left join a table on a left joined table as follows.
I have the tables:
accounts (id, vorname, nachname)
projektkurse (id, accounts_id, projektwochen_id)
projektkurs_einzel (id, projektkurse_id)
projektkurs_einzel_zeiten (id, date, shift, projektkurs_einzel_id)
Now I want to get every account and the amount times they have an entry inside of projektkurs_einzel_zeiten, which should also be unique. So having the same date and shift multiple times does not count as multiple entries. The result should also be limited by the column projektwochen_id from the table projektkurse. This column should match a certain value for example 8.
Some Accounts don't have any entries in projektkurse, projektkurs_einzel and projektkurs_einzel_zeiten, this is why my first thought was using LEFT JOIN like this:
SELECT accounts.id, accounts.vorname, accounts.nachname, COUNT(DISTINCT projektkurs_einzel_zeiten.date, projektkurs_einzel_zeiten.shift) AS T
FROM accounts
LEFT JOIN projektkurse on accounts.id = projektkurse.creator_id
LEFT JOIN projektkurs_einzel on projektkurse.id = projektkurs_einzel.projektkurs_id
LEFT JOIN projektkurs_einzel_zeiten ON projektkurs_einzel.id = projektkurs_einzel_zeiten.projektkurs_einzel_id
WHERE projektkurse.projektwochen_id = 8
GROUP BY accounts.id
This query does not achieve exactly what I want. It only returns accounts that have atleast one entry in projektkurse even if they have none in projektkurs_einzel and projektkurs_einzel_zeiten. The Count is obviously 0 for them but the accounts that have no entries in projektkurse are being ignored completly.
How can I also show the accounts that don't have entries in any other table with the Count 0 aswell?
I would recommend writing the query like this:
SELECT a.id, a.vorname, a.nachname,
COUNT(DISTINCT pez.date, pez.shift) AS T
FROM accounts a LEFT JOIN
projektkurse
ON a.id = pk.creator_id AND
pk.projektwochen_id = 8 LEFT JOIN
projektkurs_einzel pe
ON pk.id = pe.projektkurs_id LEFT JOIN
projektkurs_einzel_zeiten pez
ON pe.id = pez.projektkurs_einzel_id
GROUP BY a.id, a.vorname, a.nachname;
Notes:
Your problem is fixed by moving the WHERE condition to the ON clause. Your WHERE turns the outer join into an inner join, because NULL values do not match.
Table aliases make the query easier to write and to read.
It is a best practice to include all unaggregated columns in the GROUP BY. However, assuming that id is unique, your formulation is okay (due to something called "functional dependencies").
You should not use eft join table's column ins where condition this work as inner join
You should move the where condition for a left joined table in the corresponding ON clause
SELECT accounts.id, accounts.vorname, accounts.nachname, COUNT(DISTINCT projektkurs_einzel_zeiten.date, projektkurs_einzel_zeiten.shift) AS T
FROM accounts
LEFT JOIN projektkurse on accounts.id = projektkurse.creator_id
AND projektkurse.projektwochen_id = 8
LEFT JOIN projektkurs_einzel on projektkurse.id = projektkurs_einzel.projektkurs_id
LEFT JOIN projektkurs_einzel_zeiten ON projektkurs_einzel.id = projektkurs_einzel_zeiten.projektkurs_einzel_id
GROUP BY accounts.id

Full outer Join mySQL - missing rows

I am trying to emulate a full outer join in mySQL by using a left join and unioning it with a right join.
SELECT * FROM auxview_candiNotes AS a
LEFT JOIN auxview_clientNotes AS b ON a.dateAdded = b.dateAdded
UNION
SELECT * FROM auxview_candiNotes AS a
RIGHT JOIN auxview_clientNotes AS b ON a.dateAdded = b.dateAdded
The reason I am doing this is because I am joining two tables and occasionally one of them will not have a value on a specific date (thus the date is not listed in the table). However the joined table should display all dates, that occur in either or both of the tables. If one of the tables does not contain a value for a specific date, it should return NULL.
However, some dates from the auxview_clientNotes table are not listed in the joined table.
Thanks in advance!
This method isn't exactly a full outer join, because the union removes duplicates. Duplicates can be generated when the underlying tables have duplicates. Often duplicate removal is considered a "good" think, but the method is not exactly equivalent to a full outer join.
I prefer a left join approach:
select candi.*, client.*
from (select dateAdded from auxview_candiNotes union -- intentionally not `union all`
select dateAdded from auxview_clientNotes
) d left join
auxview_candiNotes candi
on candi.dateAdded = d.dateAdded left join
auxview_clientNotes client
on client.dateAdded = d.dateAdded;

Left join issue with reference table

Im having a bit of difficulty with getting user information from one place to another.
There are 3 tables dbo.gr_usersource and dbo.gr_task and dbo.gr_user
In the dbo.gr_task table a column is filled with values that match entries in dbo.gr_usersource table that has another value that corresponds to the value in the dbo.gr_user table. You could call it a reference table between dbo.gr_task and dbo.gr_user tables.
My query looks like this;
select
dbo.gr_task.task_number
, dbo.gr_task.task_name
, dbo.gr_task.task_description
from dbo.gr_task
left join dbo.gr_user AS Handler
on dbo.gr_usersource.usersource_user = Handler.user_id
and dbo.gr_task.task_handler = dbo.gr.usersource.usersource.id
The last step would be to get the column user_name from table user when the join is working.
You have missed mediator table in your join so use as per below-
SELECT dbo.gr_task.task_number,dbo.gr_task.task_name, dbo.gr_task.task_description
FROM dbo.gr_task AS gt
LEFT JOIN dbo.gr_usersource gus ON gt.task_handler=gus.usersource.id
LEFT JOIN dbo.gr_user AS gu ON gus.usersource_user=gu.user_id;
Note: If you want only matching rows in all 3 tables then you should use normal join instead of left join.
This may work for you.
Note that there are no columns from your joined tables in your select list so left joins would have no impact on your result set.
Inner joins will filter your results set even if you bring back no columns, i.e., enforce the join condition to match rows in both tables.
SELECT
t.task_number
, t.task_name
, t.task_description
FROM dbo.gr_task t
INNER JOIN dbo.gr_usersource us
ON us.usersource.id = t.task_handler
INNER JOIN dbo.gr_user u
ON u.user_id = us.usersource_user

MySQL getting data from 3 tables which are connected by mapping tables

I have the following database example:
The example is pretty much self-explanatory: There are lessons held by teachers at defined time periods (time_start, time_end) each time period -> lesson connection has its own max_students number.
I know want to list all lessons with all information of the 3 tables (and the max_students). I would do it like that (I heard, that joining table like that is the fastest way):
SELECT * FROM lesson, teacher, time, teacher_has_lesson, time_has_lesson
WHERE lesson.lesson_id = teacher_has_lesson.lesson_lesson_id
AND teacher.teacher_id = teacher_has_lesson.teacher_teacher_id
AND lesson.lesson_id = time_has_lesson.lesson_lesson_id
AND time.time_id = time_has_lesson.time_time_id
1.) Is this a good solution if you just want to join 3 tables or are there better ones?
2.) This SQL call will get me only lessons, that have a teacher and a time. I also want to display lessons, that are in the database, but dont have a teacher or time yet. How can I do that?
There's an alternative way of writing this using join syntax. What you have is equivalent to an inner join, where you only see rows where there are matches:
select
*
from
lesson l
inner join
teacher_has_lesson tl
on l.lession_id = tl.lesson_lesson_id
inner join
teacher t
on tl.teacher_teacher_id = t.teacher_d
inner join
time_has_lesson tml
on l.lesson_id = tml.lesson_lesson_id
inner join
time tm
on tml.time_time_id = tm.time_ud
There's another type of join called outer join, where all the rows from one table are shown, and null values supplied if there are no matching values in the other table. It comes in two or three variants. left outer join shows all rows from the first table. right outer join shows all rows from the second table. full outer join shows all rows from both tables. So, for your second query you could use:
select
*
from
lesson l
left outer join
teacher_has_lesson tl
on l.lession_id = tl.lesson_lesson_id
left outer join
teacher t
on tl.teacher_teacher_id = t.teacher_d
left outer join
time_has_lesson tml
on l.lesson_id = tml.lesson_lesson_id
left outer join
time tm
on tml.time_time_id = tm.time_ud

MySQL Multiple Joins in one query?

I have the following query:
SELECT
dashboard_data.headline,
dashboard_data.message,
dashboard_messages.image_id
FROM dashboard_data
INNER JOIN dashboard_messages
ON dashboard_message_id = dashboard_messages.id
So I am using an INNER JOIN and grabbing the image_id. So now, I want to take that image_id and turn it into images.filename from the images table.
How can I add that in to my query?
You can simply add another join like this:
SELECT dashboard_data.headline, dashboard_data.message, dashboard_messages.image_id, images.filename
FROM dashboard_data
INNER JOIN dashboard_messages
ON dashboard_message_id = dashboard_messages.id
INNER JOIN images
ON dashboard_messages.image_id = images.image_id
However be aware that, because it is an INNER JOIN, if you have a message without an image, the entire row will be skipped. If this is a possibility, you may want to do a LEFT OUTER JOIN which will return all your dashboard messages and an image_filename only if one exists (otherwise you'll get a null)
SELECT dashboard_data.headline, dashboard_data.message, dashboard_messages.image_id, images.filename
FROM dashboard_data
INNER JOIN dashboard_messages
ON dashboard_message_id = dashboard_messages.id
LEFT OUTER JOIN images
ON dashboard_messages.image_id = images.image_id
Just add another join:
SELECT dashboard_data.headline,
dashboard_data.message,
dashboard_messages.image_id,
images.filename
FROM dashboard_data
INNER JOIN dashboard_messages
ON dashboard_message_id = dashboard_messages.id
INNER JOIN images
ON dashboard_messages.image_id = images.image_id
I shared my experience of using two LEFT JOINS in a single SQL query.
I have 3 tables:
Table 1) Patient consists columns PatientID, PatientName
Table 2) Appointment consists columns AppointmentID, AppointmentDateTime, PatientID, DoctorID
Table 3) Doctor consists columns DoctorID, DoctorName
Query:
SELECT Patient.patientname, AppointmentDateTime, Doctor.doctorname
FROM Appointment
LEFT JOIN Doctor ON Appointment.doctorid = Doctor.doctorId //have doctorId column common
LEFT JOIN Patient ON Appointment.PatientId = Patient.PatientId //have patientid column common
WHERE Doctor.Doctorname LIKE 'varun%' // setting doctor name by using LIKE
AND Appointment.AppointmentDateTime BETWEEN '1/16/2001' AND '9/9/2014' //comparison b/w dates
ORDER BY AppointmentDateTime ASC; // getting data as ascending order
I wrote the solution to get date format like "mm/dd/yy" (under my name "VARUN TEJ REDDY")
Multi joins in SQL work by progressively creating derived tables one after the other.
See this link explaining the process:
https://www.interfacett.com/blogs/multiple-joins-work-just-like-single-joins/