Multiple MySQL queries from same table - mysql

Thanks in advance for the help.
I have a table labelled attributes. In that table is product item numbers (pin), and attribute numbers. Each attribute for a pin is in a separate row
Ex.
pin attribute
111 4
111 5
111 10
112 4
112 5
...
I am trying to find a query that will allow me to say "Select pin if attribute = 4 and attribute = 5"
The attributes would be color, size, etc.. so get all records that are red (4) and size Small (5).
In the example above, it would return pins 111 and 112.
Mike

This should work for you using count with distinct:
select pin
from attributes
where attribute in (4,5)
group by pin
having count(distinct attribute) = 2
This will return any pins that have both attributes 4 and 5.
SQL Fiddle Demo

This is an example of a "set-within-sets" query. I advocate doing this with aggregation and a having clause. For your example, this would look like:
select pin
from attributes
group by pin
having sum(attribute = 4) > 0 and
sum(attribute = 5) > 0;
The reason I like this approach is because it is flexible. If you wanted attributes 4 or 5, the query would be:
having sum(attribute = 4) > 0 or
sum(attribute = 5) > 0;
If you wanted 4 and 5 and nothing else:
having sum(attribute = 4) > 0 and
sum(attribute = 5) > 0 and
sum(attribute not in (4, 5)) = 0;

select pin,
group_concat(distinct attribute order by attribute) as atts
from attributes
where attribute in (4,5)
group by pin
having (atts = '4,5');
fiddle

Related

SQL Query - Conditional Values in a User-defined Column

Hi Stack Overflow Community,
I am researching how to create a query that conditionally assigns values in a user-defined column based upon values in another column. I didn't know if this was entirely possible, as I couldn't find any references on this. I know that it's possible to create a user-defined column by just entering in something like 'Yellow' As Color, but these are limited to static values.
I have provided an example of the output below, and the end result would be the user-defined column values would be a string.
X(Column from Table) Color(User-Defined Column)
1 if X = 1, Color = 'Brown'
2 if X = 2, Color = 'Blue'
3 if X = 3, Color = 'Red'
4 if X = 4, Color = 'Orange'
5 if X = 5, Color = 'Purple'
X Color
1 Brown
2 Blue
3 Red
4 Orange
5 Purple
Any input would be greatly appreciated, and thank you in advance!
Daniel
For small amount of available values i think case will be most appropriate.
SELECT X,
CASE
WHEN X = 1 THEN "Brown"
WHEN X = 2 THEN "Blue"
WHEN X = 3 THEN "Red"
WHEN X = 4 THEN "Orange"
WHEN X = 5 THEN "Purple"
ELSE "No color"
END AS Color
FROM Table;

sql/mysql Multiple results from one value

I am working on an integration output report to feed into a purchase order system.
All of the possible items are straightforward except for one particular item, which has to be broke out into multiple components.
The current code:
select concat("M", id) as ID, MaterialId, quantity, uom,
crew_job.JobSubNbr, crew_job.EmployeeId, crewjob_schedule_actual.startTime
from crewjob_material_actual
inner join crew_job on crewjob_material_actual.crew_job_id = crew_job.crew_job_id
inner join crewjob_schedule_actual on
crewjob_material_actual.crew_job_id = crewjob_schedule_actual.crew_job_id
And the current results output:
What I need to do is something of the effect of (and this is in plain English)
IF "MaterialID" = '3'
THEN [the results should be] show me 3 rows of data such as:
ID = MZ4931, MaterialID = 100, Qty = 0.25, UOM = 1 .... (all else the
same) ID = MZ4932, MaterialID = 101, Qty = 0.50, UOM = 1 .... (all
else the same) ID = MZ4933, MaterialID = 102, Qty = 0.33, UOM = 2
.... (all else the same)
Essential, item #3 is a "combined item" that I need to apply based on a standard ratio, where 1 unit of Item 3 is equal to .25 of item 100, .50 of item 101, and 0.33 of item 102. I'm sure this isn't too difficult but I was having a hard time searching.

What way to "rank" dataset Mysql

Situation is as follows:
I have a database with 40.000 cities. Those cities have certain types of properties with an value.
For example "mountains" or "beaches". If a city has lots of mountains the value for mountain will be high if there are less mountains the number is lower.
Table with city name and properties and values:
With that, I have a table with the avarage values of all those properties.
What I need to happen: I want the user search for a city with has one or multiple properties, find the best match and attach a score from 0 - 100 to it.
The way I do this is as follow:
1. I first get the 25%, 50% and 70% values for the properties:
_var_[property]_25 = [integer]
_var_[property]_50 = [integer]
_var_[property]_70 = [integer]
2. Then I need to use this algorithm:
_var_user_search_for_properties = [mountain,beach]
_var_max_property_percentage = 100 / [properties user search for]
_var_match_percentage = 0
for each _var_user_search_for_properties
if [property] < _var_[property]_25 then
_var_match_percentage += _var_max_property_percentage
elseif [property] < _var_[property]_50 then
_var_match_percentage += _var_max_property_percentage / 4 * 3
elseif [property] < _var_[property]_75 then
_var_match_percentage += _var_max_property_percentage / 4 * 2
elseif [property] < 0 then
_var_match_percentage += _var_max_property_percentage / 4 * 1
end if
next
order all rows by _var_match_percentage desc
The question is: is it posible to do this with MySQL?
How do I calculate this "match percentage" with it?
Or wil it be faster to get all the rows and indexes out of the database and loop them all trough .NET?
If the percentages can be stored in the database, you could try MySQL's LIMIT clause. See http://www.mysqltutorial.org/mysql-limit.aspx.

MySQL 'Order By' - sorting alphanumeric correctly

I want to sort the following data items in the order they are presented below (numbers 1-12):
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
However, my query - using order by xxxxx asc sorts by the first digit above all else:
1
10
11
12
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
Any tricks to make it sort more properly?
Further, in the interest of full disclosure, this could be a mix of letters and numbers (although right now it is not), e.g.:
A1
534G
G46A
100B
100A
100JE
etc....
Thanks!
update: people asking for query
select * from table order by name asc
People use different tricks to do this. I Googled and find out some results each follow different tricks. Have a look at them:
Alpha Numeric Sorting in MySQL
Natural Sorting in MySQL
Sorting of numeric values mixed with alphanumeric values
mySQL natural sort
Natural Sort in MySQL
Edit:
I have just added the code of each link for future visitors.
Alpha Numeric Sorting in MySQL
Given input
1A 1a 10A 9B 21C 1C 1D
Expected output
1A 1C 1D 1a 9B 10A 21C
Query
Bin Way
===================================
SELECT
tbl_column,
BIN(tbl_column) AS binray_not_needed_column
FROM db_table
ORDER BY binray_not_needed_column ASC , tbl_column ASC
-----------------------
Cast Way
===================================
SELECT
tbl_column,
CAST(tbl_column as SIGNED) AS casted_column
FROM db_table
ORDER BY casted_column ASC , tbl_column ASC
Natural Sorting in MySQL
Given input
Table: sorting_test
-------------------------- -------------
| alphanumeric VARCHAR(75) | integer INT |
-------------------------- -------------
| test1 | 1 |
| test12 | 2 |
| test13 | 3 |
| test2 | 4 |
| test3 | 5 |
-------------------------- -------------
Expected Output
-------------------------- -------------
| alphanumeric VARCHAR(75) | integer INT |
-------------------------- -------------
| test1 | 1 |
| test2 | 4 |
| test3 | 5 |
| test12 | 2 |
| test13 | 3 |
-------------------------- -------------
Query
SELECT alphanumeric, integer
FROM sorting_test
ORDER BY LENGTH(alphanumeric), alphanumeric
Sorting of numeric values mixed with alphanumeric values
Given input
2a, 12, 5b, 5a, 10, 11, 1, 4b
Expected Output
1, 2a, 4b, 5a, 5b, 10, 11, 12
Query
SELECT version
FROM version_sorting
ORDER BY CAST(version AS UNSIGNED), version;
Just do this:
SELECT * FROM table ORDER BY column `name`+0 ASC
Appending the +0 will mean that:
0,
10,
11,
2,
3,
4
becomes :
0,
2,
3,
4,
10,
11
I hate this, but this will work
order by lpad(name, 10, 0) <-- assuming maximum string length is 10
<-- you can adjust to a bigger length if you want to
I know this post is closed but I think my way could help some people. So there it is :
My dataset is very similar but is a bit more complex. It has numbers, alphanumeric data :
1
2
Chair
3
0
4
5
-
Table
10
13
19
Windows
99
102
Dog
I would like to have the '-' symbol at first, then the numbers, then the text.
So I go like this :
SELECT name, (name = '-') boolDash, (name = '0') boolZero, (name+0 > 0) boolNum
FROM table
ORDER BY boolDash DESC, boolZero DESC, boolNum DESC, (name+0), name
The result should be something :
-
0
1
2
3
4
5
10
13
99
102
Chair
Dog
Table
Windows
The whole idea is doing some simple check into the SELECT and sorting with the result.
This works for type of data:
Data1,
Data2, Data3 ......,Data21. Means "Data" String is common in all rows.
For ORDER BY ASC it will sort perfectly, For ORDER BY DESC not suitable.
SELECT * FROM table_name ORDER BY LENGTH(column_name), column_name ASC;
I had some good results with
SELECT alphanumeric, integer FROM sorting_test ORDER BY CAST(alphanumeric AS UNSIGNED), alphanumeric ASC
This type of question has been asked previously.
The type of sorting you are talking about is called "Natural Sorting".
The data on which you want to do sort is alphanumeric.
It would be better to create a new column for sorting.
For further help check
natural-sort-in-mysql
If you need to sort an alpha-numeric column that does not have any standard format whatsoever
SELECT * FROM table ORDER BY (name = '0') DESC, (name+0 > 0) DESC, name+0 ASC, name ASC
You can adapt this solution to include support for non-alphanumeric characters if desired using additional logic.
This should sort alphanumeric field like:
1/ Number only, order by 1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9,10,11 etc...
2/ Then field with text like: 1foo, 2bar, aaa11aa, aaa22aa, b5452 etc...
SELECT MyField
FROM MyTable
order by
IF( MyField REGEXP '^-?[0-9]+$' = 0,
9999999999 ,
CAST(MyField AS DECIMAL)
), MyField
The query check if the data is a number, if not put it to 9999999999 , then order first on this column, then order on data with text
Good luck!
Instead of trying to write some function and slow down the SELECT query, I thought of another way of doing this...
Create an extra field in your database that holds the result from the following Class and when you insert a new row, run the field value that will be naturally sorted through this class and save its result in the extra field. Then instead of sorting by your original field, sort by the extra field.
String nsFieldVal = new NaturalSortString(getFieldValue(), 4).toString()
The above means:
- Create a NaturalSortString for the String returned from getFieldValue()
- Allow up to 4 bytes to store each character or number (4 bytes = ffff = 65535)
| field(32) | nsfield(161) |
a1 300610001
String sortString = new NaturalSortString(getString(), 4).toString()
import StringUtils;
/**
* Creates a string that allows natural sorting in a SQL database
* eg, 0 1 1a 2 3 3a 10 100 a a1 a1a1 b
*/
public class NaturalSortString {
private String inStr;
private int byteSize;
private StringBuilder out = new StringBuilder();
/**
* A byte stores the hex value (0 to f) of a letter or number.
* Since a letter is two bytes, the minimum byteSize is 2.
*
* 2 bytes = 00 - ff (max number is 255)
* 3 bytes = 000 - fff (max number is 4095)
* 4 bytes = 0000 - ffff (max number is 65535)
*
* For example:
* dog123 = 64,6F,67,7B and thus byteSize >= 2.
* dog280 = 64,6F,67,118 and thus byteSize >= 3.
*
* For example:
* The String, "There are 1000000 spots on a dalmatian" would require a byteSize that can
* store the number '1000000' which in hex is 'f4240' and thus the byteSize must be at least 5
*
* The dbColumn size to store the NaturalSortString is calculated as:
* > originalStringColumnSize x byteSize + 1
* The extra '1' is a marker for String type - Letter, Number, Symbol
* Thus, if the originalStringColumn is varchar(32) and the byteSize is 5:
* > NaturalSortStringColumnSize = 32 x 5 + 1 = varchar(161)
*
* The byteSize must be the same for all NaturalSortStrings created in the same table.
* If you need to change the byteSize (for instance, to accommodate larger numbers), you will
* need to recalculate the NaturalSortString for each existing row using the new byteSize.
*
* #param str String to create a natural sort string from
* #param byteSize Per character storage byte size (minimum 2)
* #throws Exception See the error description thrown
*/
public NaturalSortString(String str, int byteSize) throws Exception {
if (str == null || str.isEmpty()) return;
this.inStr = str;
this.byteSize = Math.max(2, byteSize); // minimum of 2 bytes to hold a character
setStringType();
iterateString();
}
private void setStringType() {
char firstchar = inStr.toLowerCase().subSequence(0, 1).charAt(0);
if (Character.isLetter(firstchar)) // letters third
out.append(3);
else if (Character.isDigit(firstchar)) // numbers second
out.append(2);
else // non-alphanumeric first
out.append(1);
}
private void iterateString() throws Exception {
StringBuilder n = new StringBuilder();
for (char c : inStr.toLowerCase().toCharArray()) { // lowercase for CASE INSENSITIVE sorting
if (Character.isDigit(c)) {
// group numbers
n.append(c);
continue;
}
if (n.length() > 0) {
addInteger(n.toString());
n = new StringBuilder();
}
addCharacter(c);
}
if (n.length() > 0) {
addInteger(n.toString());
}
}
private void addInteger(String s) throws Exception {
int i = Integer.parseInt(s);
if (i >= (Math.pow(16, byteSize)))
throw new Exception("naturalsort_bytesize_exceeded");
out.append(StringUtils.padLeft(Integer.toHexString(i), byteSize));
}
private void addCharacter(char c) {
//TODO: Add rest of accented characters
if (c >= 224 && c <= 229) // set accented a to a
c = 'a';
else if (c >= 232 && c <= 235) // set accented e to e
c = 'e';
else if (c >= 236 && c <= 239) // set accented i to i
c = 'i';
else if (c >= 242 && c <= 246) // set accented o to o
c = 'o';
else if (c >= 249 && c <= 252) // set accented u to u
c = 'u';
else if (c >= 253 && c <= 255) // set accented y to y
c = 'y';
out.append(StringUtils.padLeft(Integer.toHexString(c), byteSize));
}
#Override
public String toString() {
return out.toString();
}
}
For completeness, below is the StringUtils.padLeft method:
public static String padLeft(String s, int n) {
if (n - s.length() == 0) return s;
return String.format("%0" + (n - s.length()) + "d%s", 0, s);
}
The result should come out like the following
-1
-a
0
1
1.0
1.01
1.1.1
1a
1b
9
10
10a
10ab
11
12
12abcd
100
a
a1a1
a1a2
a-1
a-2
áviacion
b
c1
c2
c12
c100
d
d1.1.1
e
MySQL ORDER BY Sorting alphanumeric on correct order
example:
SELECT `alphanumericCol` FROM `tableName` ORDER BY
SUBSTR(`alphanumericCol` FROM 1 FOR 1),
LPAD(lower(`alphanumericCol`), 10,0) ASC
output:
1
2
11
21
100
101
102
104
S-104A
S-105
S-107
S-111
This is from tutorials point
SELECT * FROM yourTableName ORDER BY
SUBSTR(yourColumnName FROM 1 FOR 2),
CAST(SUBSTR(yourColumnName FROM 2) AS UNSIGNED);
it is slightly different from another answer of this thread
For reference, this is the original link
https://www.tutorialspoint.com/mysql-order-by-string-with-numbers
Another point regarding UNSIGNED is written here
https://electrictoolbox.com/mysql-order-string-as-int/
While this has REGEX too
https://www.sitepoint.com/community/t/how-to-sort-text-with-numbers-with-sql/346088/9
SELECT length(actual_project_name),actual_project_name,
SUBSTRING_INDEX(actual_project_name,'-',1) as aaaaaa,
SUBSTRING_INDEX(actual_project_name, '-', -1) as actual_project_number,
concat(SUBSTRING_INDEX(actual_project_name,'-',1),SUBSTRING_INDEX(actual_project_name, '-', -1)) as a
FROM ctts.test22
order by
SUBSTRING_INDEX(actual_project_name,'-',1) asc,cast(SUBSTRING_INDEX(actual_project_name, '-', -1) as unsigned) asc
This is a simple example.
SELECT HEX(some_col) h
FROM some_table
ORDER BY h
order by len(xxxxx),xxxxx
Eg:
SELECT * from customer order by len(xxxxx),xxxxx
Try this For ORDER BY DESC
SELECT * FROM testdata ORDER BY LENGHT(name) DESC, name DESC
SELECT
s.id, s.name, LENGTH(s.name) len, ASCII(s.name) ASCCCI
FROM table_name s
ORDER BY ASCCCI,len,NAME ASC;
Assuming varchar field containing number, decimal, alphanumeric and string, for example :
Let's suppose Column Name is "RandomValues" and Table name is "SortingTest"
A1
120
2.23
3
0
2
Apple
Zebra
Banana
23
86.Akjf9
Abtuo332
66.9
22
ABC
SELECT * FROM SortingTest order by IF( RandomValues REGEXP '^-?[0-9,.]+$' = 0,
9999999999 ,
CAST(RandomValues AS DECIMAL)
), RandomValues
Above query will do sorting on number & decimal values first and after that all alphanumeric values got sorted.
This will always put the values starting with a number first:
ORDER BY my_column REGEXP '^[0-9]' DESC, length(my_column + 0), my_column ";
Works as follows:
Step1 - Is first char a digit? 1 if true, 0 if false, so order by this DESC
Step2 - How many digits is the number? Order by this ASC
Step3 - Order by the field itself
Input:
('100'),
('1'),
('10'),
('0'),
('2'),
('2a'),
('12sdfa'),
('12 sdfa'),
('Bar nah');
Output:
0
1
2
2a
10
12 sdfa
12sdfa
100
Bar nah
Really problematic for my scenario...
select * from table order by lpad(column, 20, 0)
My column is a varchar, but has numeric input (1, 2, 3...) , mixed numeric (1A, 1B, 1C) and too string data (INT, SHIP)

mysql,select query ,and or clause problem

i have a table named item with four attribute name,code,class,value
now i want to group them in following way:
group a: name='A',code=11,class='high',value between( (5300 and 5310),(7100 and 7200),(8210 and 8290))
group b: name='b',code=11,class='high',value between( (1300 and 1310),(2100 and 2200),(3210 and 3290))
how can i do it?
You might want to try something like this:
SELECT
CASE
WHEN code = 11 AND
class = 'high' AND
(code BETWEEN 5300 AND 5310 OR
code BETWEEN 7100 AND 7200 OR
code BETWEEN 8210 AND 8290)
THEN 'A'
WHEN code = 11 AND
class = 'high' AND
(code BETWEEN 1300 AND 1310 OR
code BETWEEN 2100 AND 2200 OR
code BETWEEN 3210 AND 3290)
THEN 'B'
ELSE Unknown
END AS name,
*
FROM your_table
ORDER BY name
You might wish to change ORDER BY to GROUP BY and you should be aware that BETWEEN includes both endpoints.
First group
select * from item
where name LIKE 'A'
and code LIKE '11'
and class LIKE 'high'
and (value BETWEEN 5300 AND 5310 OR value BETWEEN 7100 AND 7200 OR value BETWEEN 8210 AND 8290)
the same idea for group b