i need to write a query for the following situation:
3 columns: "box", "in", "out" (box is an integer, in and out are dates)
i need something to test if from the "in" date to the "out" date (the period between these dates), a certain box id number has been given already.
i thought to do something like:
SELECT COUNT(*) FROM `tbl` WHERE `box` = '#' AND ***period*** BETWEEN 'date1' AND 'date2'
(i know BETWEEN doesn't work this way (link), but it was just to give you an idea...)
period = the new dates that i'm tryin to register in the database
so, if the query returns '0' i know i can assign this box # in those dates, if not i know i can't. i'm stucked here since last week!! X(
I think you want either:
SELECT COUNT(*) FROM tbl WHERE box = '#' AND
`in` =< 'date1' AND out >= 'date1'
OR `in` =< 'date2' AND out >= 'date2'
or
SELECT ... AND
period BETWEEN `in` AND out
Related
I have a table containing stock market data (open, hi, lo, close prices) but in a random order of date:
Date Open Hi Lo Close
12/10/2019 313.82 314.54 312.81 313.58
11/22/2019 311.09 311.24 309.85 310.96
11/25/2019 311.98 313.37 311.98 313.37
11/26/2019 313.41 314.28 313.06 314.08
11/27/2019 314.61 315.48 314.37 315.48
11/29/2019 314.86 315.13 314.06 314.31
12/2/2019 314.59 314.66 311.17 311.64
12/3/2019 308.65 309.64 307.13 309.55
I have another value in a PHP variable (say $BaseValue),and a start date and end date ($startdt and $enddt).
1) My requirement is to pick-up the value from the HI column, if it exceeds the $BaseValue on the very FIRST date in a chronological order between the given start and end dates.
For example, if the $BaseValue=314, startdt=11/22, enddt=12/2, then I want to retrieve the Date (11/26/19) as it is the earliest date on which the Hi value (314.28) exceeded the $Basevalue within the given date range. The select statement should return both the Hi value (314.28) and the Date (11/26/19).
2) Additionally, I also need to retrieve the HIGHEST value and date from the HI column during the given date duration. In the above scenario, it should return 315.48 and corresponding date 11/27.
The table is NOT in a chronological order - its randomly filled.
I am unable to get the first query at all with the use of MAX function and its various combinations. Makes me wonder if that is possible at all in SQL or not.
While the second is straightforward, I was wondering if it is more efficient and less complex to club the two queries and get the four values in one single shot.
Any ideas on how can I approach the need to fulfill this requirement please?
Thanks
You could use two subqueries for filtering, one per criteria, like:
select t.*
from mytable t
where
t.date = (
select min(t1.date)
from mytable t1
where t1.date between :datedt and :enddt and t1.hi >= :basevalue
)
or t.hi = (
select max(t1.hi)
from mytable t1
where t1.date between datedt and :enddt and t1.hi >= :basevalue
)
Another option is to union two queries with orer by and limit:
(
select t.*
from mytable
where t.date between :datedt and :enddt and t1.hi >= :basevalue
order by t.date
limit 1
)
union
(
select t.*
from mytable t
where t.date between :datedt and :enddt and t1.hi >= :basevalue
order by t.hi desc, t.date
limit 1
)
Please note that both queries do not do exactly the same thing. If there are ties for the highest hi in the period, the first query will return all ties, while the second will pick the earliest one. It's up to you to decide which solution better fits your use case.
I have epoch timestamps into "PART_EPOCH" column, table name is "crud_mysqli"
I would like to select associated "PART_ID" value for the next FUTURE timestamps. (avoid a research into past timestamps)
The following MySQLI query should select the MIN (next) value within the future : > now.
But it does not return anything.
It does return expected return if i state clauses seperately,
combining clauses as below returns no result.
Would you please tell me what is wrong here :
// Find next event PART_ID name :
// SELECT lowest (next) PART_ID value in the future (do not select winthin past PART_EPOCH values)
$query = "SELECT
PART_ID
FROM crud_mysqli
WHERE (PART_EPOCH = (SELECT MIN(PART_EPOCH) FROM crud_mysqli))
AND (PART_EPOCH > UNIX_TIMESTAMP(NOW()))
";
WHERE (PART_EPOCH = (SELECT MIN(PART_EPOCH) FROM crud_mysqli))
Here you say to only take the entry with the lowest timestamp, which is probably somthing in the past.
AND (PART_EPOCH > UNIX_TIMESTAMP(NOW()))
And here you say, that it should be in the future. The two conditions are excluding each other, if you have any entry with the timestamp in the future.
So you need to put the second condition into the subquery:
SELECT
PART_ID
FROM crud_mysqli
WHERE PART_EPOCH = (
SELECT MIN(PART_EPOCH)
FROM crud_mysqli
WHERE PART_EPOCH > UNIX_TIMESTAMP(NOW())
)
That means: "take the entry with the lowest timestamp in the past"
However.. you can as good do the following:
SELECT PART_ID
FROM crud_mysqli
WHERE PART_EPOCH > UNIX_TIMESTAMP(NOW())
ORDER BY PART_EPOCH ASC
LIMIT 1
The result would only differ if you have two entries with the same timestamp. In that case the first query would return both of them - the second query only one.
I currently have an employee logging sql table that has 3 columns
fromState: String,
toState: String,
timestamp: DateTime
fromState is either In or Out. In means employee came in and Out means employee went out. Each row can only transition from In to Out or Out to In.
I'd like to generate a temporary table in sql to keep track during a given hour (hour by hour), how many employees are there in the company. Aka, resulting table has columns HourBucket, NumEmployees.
In non-SQL code I can do this by initializing the numEmployees as 0 and go through the table row by row (sorted by timestamp) and add (employee came in) or subtract (went out) to numEmployees (bucketed by timestamp hour).
I'm clueless as how to do this in SQL. Any clues?
Use a COUNT ... GROUP BY query. Can't see what you're using toState from your description though! Also, assuming you have an employeeID field.
E.g.
SELECT fromState AS 'Status', COUNT(*) AS 'Number'
FROM StaffinBuildingTable
INNER JOIN (SELECT employeeID AS 'empID', MAX(timestamp) AS 'latest' FROM StaffinBuildingTable GROUP BY employeeID) AS LastEntry ON StaffinBuildingTable.employeeID = LastEntry.empID
GROUP BY fromState
The LastEntry subquery will produce a list of employeeIDs limited to the last timestamp for each employee.
The INNER JOIN will limit the main table to just the employeeIDs that match both sides.
The outer GROUP BY produces the count.
SELECT HOUR(SBT.timestamp) AS 'Hour', SBT.fromState AS 'Status', COUNT(*) AS 'Number'
FROM StaffinBuildingTable AS SBT
INNER JOIN (
SELECT SBIJ.employeeID AS 'empID', MAX(timestamp) AS 'latest'
FROM StaffinBuildingTable AS SBIJ
WHERE DATE(SBIJ.timestamp) = CURDATE()
GROUP BY SBIJ.employeeID) AS LastEntry ON SBT.employeeID = LastEntry.empID
GROUP BY SBT.fromState, HOUR(SBT.timestamp)
Replace CURDATE() with whatever date you are interested in.
Note this is non-optimal as it calculates the HOUR twice - once for the data and once for the group.
Again you are using the INNER JOIN to limit the number of returned row, this time to the last timestamp on a given day.
To me your description of the FromState and ToState seem the wrong way round, I'd expect to doing this based on the ToState. But assuming I'm wrong on that the following should point you in the right direction:
First, I create a "Numbers" table containing 24 rows one for each hour of the day:
create table tblHours
(Number int);
insert into tblHours values
(0),(1),(2),(3),(4),(5),(6),(7),
(8),(9),(10),(11),(12),(13),(14),(15),
(16),(17),(18),(19),(20),(21),(22),(23);
Then for each date in your employee logging table, I create a row in another new table to contain your counts:
create table tblDailyHours
(
HourBucket datetime,
NumEmployees int
);
insert into tblDailyHours (HourBucket, NumEmployees)
select distinct
date_add(date(t.timeStamp), interval h.Number HOUR) as HourBucket,
0 as NumEmployees
from
tblEmployeeLogging t
CROSS JOIN tblHours h;
Then I update this table to contain all the relevant counts:
update tblDailyHours h
join
(select
h2.HourBucket,
sum(case when el.fromState = 'In' then 1 else -1 end) as cnt
from
tblDailyHours h2
join tblEmployeeLogging el on
h2.HourBucket >= el.timeStamp
group by h2.HourBucket
) cnt ON
h.HourBucket = cnt.HourBucket
set NumEmployees = cnt.cnt;
You can now retrieve the counts with
select *
from tblDailyHours
order by HourBucket;
The counts give the number on site at each of the times displayed, if you want during the hour in question, we'd need to tweak this a little.
There is a working version of this code (using not very realistic data in the logging table) here: rextester.com/DYOR23344
Original Answer (Based on a single over all count)
If you're happy to search over all rows, and want the current "head count" you can use this:
select
sum(case when t.FromState = 'In' then 1 else -1) as Heads
from
MyTable t
But if you know that there will always be no-one there at midnight, you can add a where clause to prevent it looking at more rows than it needs to:
where
date(t.timestamp) = curdate()
Again, on the assumption that the head count reaches zero at midnight, you can generalise that method to get a headcount at any time as follows:
where
date(t.timestamp) = "CENSUS DATE" AND
t.timestamp <= "CENSUS DATETIME"
Obviously you'd need to replace my quoted strings with code which returned the date and datetime of interest. If the headcount doesn't return to zero at midnight, you can achieve the same by removing the first line of the where clause.
im using a query to get data between dates but for some reason it does not pull the data of the last date selected here is my query:
SELECT * FROM order WHERE status = "completed" AND orderdate >= ? AND orderdate <= ? ORDER BY orderid DESC
Im using is equal to or less then... but still?
what am i doing wrong ?
SELECT * FROM order WHERE status = "completed" AND date(orderdate) >= date(?) AND date(orderdate) <= date(?) ORDER BY orderid DESC
It happened with me also, but in my case instead of passing a date I was querying using a datetime variable, Please make sure you are querying with date variable only.
Make sure that orderdate is date as well as your query parameter is also date, or use appropriate function to convert them in date, than query.
Your dates are actually datetimes - so you are actually, in the case of the upperbound, saying "12 midnight" on whichever date you choose. Hence, if it tries to test a value at say 10am in the morning, it fails as being outside the range.
Either set the upperbound date one day forward, or explicitly only test the date part of the datetime...
im having a problem where i cant think of a solution, maybe im having a bad table-structure or i just dont know enough about mysql select commands to think of a good solution. Maybe you can help me out:
So i got a table that has a Column with the Date-format (yyyy-mm-dd) i wanted to select all upcoming dates so i did:
SELECT * WHERE date >= now.
This worked kinda well but i also got "dates" where only the year is entered (2014-00-00) i also wanted to select these but "now" is already bigger so i made another column with the year only and if the month, date or both arent known i will use 0000-00-00 and the Column "year" now i could select like this:
SELECT * WHERE date >= now AND year >=now(year)
Now all entrys with 0000-00-00 wont be selected. If i use OR the entrys from last year will be shown.
So thats my problem, is there any way i can change my table so i can have entries with only the year or only year and month and of course all together? I already considered get rid of the date-format and use simple INT with seperated columns for year, month and date. But i think i will have the same problem.
Sometimes i just want to do a capsuled select like
SELECT *
WHERE (date >= now AND year >= now(year))
OR date == "0000-00-00" (i know that this doesnt work)
If I understood your problem correctly, you could use this request:
WHERE (date >= now OR year > now(year))
There is probably a simpler way though, that would preserve your design, like initializing at January 1st (01-01) instead of 00-00
I think you can use this code:
$_SESSION['month'] = //set here your selected month
$_SESSION['year'] = //set here your selected year
SELECT * FROM table WHERE DATEPART(m,date) >= '".$_SESSION['month']."' AND DATEPART(yyyy,year) >= '".$_SESSION['year']."' AND date <> '0000-00-00'
Change your table structure format. Actually just allow for that field to have null value when not entered. By default it will be null then. You shouldn't be storing 0000-00-00 as a value for Date type field. I would rather leave it as null , or as suggested in some of previous answers, initialize it with some other date. It would be much easier to manipulate with database then.
the problem is that half of you write is not MySQL and your database schema is terrible...
You have the following problems:
column data date does not have the date data type.
To fix it, you need to add a cast to the select statement eg. cast(datecolumn as date)
select * from table where cast(datecolumn as date) >= '2014-01-10';
the way to use now date is using the now function.
select now(), date(now());
result> 2014-01-10 11:11:36, 2014-01-10
select * from table where cast(datecolumn as date) >= date(now());
Because your datecolumn is not a date (2014-00-00 is not a valid date), you need to use string manipulation to extract the year.
select substring('2014-01-01', 1,4)
result> 2014
select * from table where substring(datecolumn, 1,4) = year(now());
The comparassion operator is = and not ==
the select statement syntax looks like this (pay attention because you are missing the table in your statement)
select * from [Table] where [column] = condition ...
You probably need or instead of ands, therefore your query should look like this:
select * from FooTable where
cast(datecolumn as date) >= date(now())
or substring(datecolumn, 1,4) >= year(now())
or datecolumn = '0000-00-00'
You should use something like phpmyAdmin or mySQL workbench to test your sql queries before try to use them on php, java or whatever is your programing language.