Can anyone help me with this query?
I have three tables (A;B;C)
A <--1....N---> B <--1....N---> C
I want all A rows having C.dates (the greatest)
SELECT A.*, MAX(C.dates)
FROM A
JOIN B ON B.A_fk = A.id
JOIN C ON C.B_fk = B.id
GROUP BY A.id
This JOIN will exclude results which wont have LEFT join. That is, if any row from A wont have B row or any row from B wont have any C row, then the row wont show. To overcome this you can use LEFT JOIN instead of JOIN.
SELECT A.*, MAX(C.dates)
FROM A
LEFT JOIN B ON B.A_fk = A.id
LEFT JOIN C ON C.B_fk = B.id
GROUP BY A.id
EDIT: Sorry didnt noticed that you needed the greatest value of C.data. There you have it. You have to use MAX function in SELECT and GROUP BY A.id
Related
There are 3 tables. Lets call them a, b and c. Selected data from table a must be intersected with b or c depending of value of one cell in table a. Lets call this cell d. Is there way in MySQL to make query like:
SELECT
a.cell,
a.other_cell,
a.d,
alias.cell,
alias.other_cell if(
a.d = 3,
left join b as alias on b.id = a.id,
left join c as alias on c.id = a.id
)
FROM
a where a.id = 123
You can try for example Conditional join as here but instead coalesce, use CASE WHEN
In short:
Instead, you simply LEFT OUTER JOIN to both tables, and in your SELECT clause, return data from the one that matches
select
E.EmployeeName,
CASE
WHEN d = 3 THEN s.store
WHEN d <>3 THEN o.office
END as Location
from
Employees E
left outer join
Stores S on …
left outer join
Offices O on …
NOTE I think the two columns must have the same type, at least in PG, not sure about MYSQL
Assuming you want select from the different tables (b and c) based on a 'cell' value in
table a then something like this work may work for you.
SELECT
a.cell,
a.other_cell,
a.d,
if(a.d = 3, b.cell, c.cell) cell
FROM a
INNER JOIN b on b.id = a.id
INNER JOIN c on c.id = a.id
WHERE a.id = 123
This should join the all 3 tables provided the id in b and c also match the id in table a. The if function will select the cell column from table b or c based on the value of column d in table a.
Also helpful: https://www.w3resource.com/mysql/control-flow-functions/if-function.php
I'm trying to adjust stock code that pulls data from two tables, in order to add a column from a third table.
Here is the original query:
SELECT a.*, b.*, a.id as jobid
from #__ja_jobs a
LEFT JOIN #__users b
ON a.user_id = b.id
WHERE 1=1
I tried this approach, but it did not seem to work.
SELECT a.*, b.*, c.user_id_value, a.id as jobid
from #__ja_jobs a
LEFT JOIN #__users b
ON a.user_id = b.id
WHERE 1=1
INNER JOIN #__ja_jobs_value c
ON a.id = c.id`
And I tried to also move the WHERE statement at the end, but still no luck. Any suggestions?
UPDATE: All fixed! I moved the WHERE to the end and then remembered a ridiculous rookie mistake - spaces at the end of all the lines.
Problem:
I'm trying to figure out how to join tables based on a condition in an SQL statement. I've spent an hour searching Google, SO, various websites and the MYSQL manual, but I just can't find the correct syntax for what I want to do.
I can't post the exact query I'm trying to get working, but I will post a simplified version for simplicity reasons.
Scenario:
Assuming I have three tables, a = person table, b = address table and c = car table.
Table b will always be joined to table a, becuase a person always lives at an address, but table c should only be joined to a if the value in the 'car_id' field is more than 0, because having a car is optional.
The query:
SELECT a.firstname, a.lastname, a.gender, a.address_id, b.address_firstline, b_address_secondline, b.postcode, c.car_manufacturer, c.car_model
FROM a
INNER JOIN b ON b.id = a.address_id
INNER JOIN c ON c.id = a.car_id AND a.car_id > 0
WHERE a.id = 1
The query above will run fine for a person with the id of 1 because he owns a car. However, if the query is run for a person with the id of 2, the query will return 0 rows because she does not own a car.
How do I make this second JOIN optional? I've tried using the IF ELSE statement, but I'm forever getting syntax errors. Could someone point me in the right direction here? Thanks in advance
You should use left outer join to join c with a.
SELECT a.firstname, a.lastname, a.gender, a.address_id, b.address_firstline, b_address_secondline, b.postcode, c.car_manufacturer, c.car_model
FROM a
INNER JOIN b ON b.id = a.address_id
LEFT OUTER JOIN c ON c.id = a.car_id AND a.car_id > 0
WHERE a.id = 1
Use LEFT JOIN instead of INNER JOIN on table c.
Unilateral joins work on this scenario.
A brief explanation.
a INNER JOIN b ON a.field1 = b.field1 returns every row for which both a.field1 and b.field1 exist and are equal
a LEFT JOIN b ON a.field1 = b.field1 returns every row from table a and returns every row in table b for which a.field1 = b.field1, and null values for non-matching values on table b.
RIGHT JOIN is analogous to LEFT JOIN
I'm coming across this situation alot, I'll have a query that will have one table needed in a join condition that may have no entries therefore requiring me to use a LEFT JOIN. I can't wrap my head around the syntax when it's used with more than 1 join.
I'll have:
SELECT A.*, B.*, C.*
FROM A, B, C
WHERE A.id = C.id
AND C.aid = A.id
AND B.cid = C.id
Along comes D with the possibility of being empty and I have to rewrite the query and run into problems.
How can I simply join D to any one of these tables?
You're much better off explicitly specifying all of your JOINs. That should make things much clearer.
SELECT A.*, B.*, C.*, D.*
FROM A
INNER JOIN C
ON C.aid = A.id
INNER JOIN B
ON B.cid = C.id
LEFT JOIN D
ON C.did = d.id
My advice is to never specify more than one column on FROM clause.
For clarity, it's better to always:
Use JOIN clause
Use aliases
Specify columns of joined tables on left side of equal sign
Example:
SELECT a.*, b.*, c.*
FROM ATable a
INNER JOIN BTable b
ON b.id = a.id
INNER JOIN CTable c
ON c.id = a.id
WHERE a.someColumn = 'something'
Not sure about MySQL, but in some other SQL flavors, you can use the same on UPDATES and DELETES, like:
DELETE FROM a
FROM ATable a
INNER JOIN BTable b
ON b.id = a.id
INNER JOIN CTable c
ON c.id = a.id
WHERE a.someColumn = 'something'
or
UPDATE a
SET something = newValue
FROM ATable a
INNER JOIN BTable b
ON b.id = a.id
INNER JOIN CTable c
ON c.id = a.id
WHERE a.someColumn = 'something'
The syntax below should help you. The basic premise is whatever table is listed LEFT is the required.. the table (or alias) on the right is optional. I understand you don't quite get it, and your syntax sample shows that (not meant to criticize) as you are joining from A -> C and C back to A on a different field. If this is the case where two fields are in the "C" table that BOTH point to A, you would re-join to A as a second alias...
select
Want.*,
Maybe.*,
SecondA.*,
B.*
From
A as Want
LEFT JOIN C as Maybe
on Want.ID = Maybe.ID
JOIN A as SecondA
on Maybe.AID = SecondA.ID
JOIN B
on Maybe.ID = B.cID
So, this query is stating I want everything from Table A (alias Want -- left side/first table in the list) Regardless of there being a match in Table C (alias Maybe) where the ID keys match.
Notice the next joins going down from "C" back to the second instance of "A" and table B. I have those as just joins... So the relationship between the "Maybe" alias, and that of second instance of "A" and "B" are JOIN (required).
Hopefully this gives some better clarification on HOW it works.
Now, for your real-life query. If you can describe what you are looking for, and your sample table structures / result expections, listing that could offer more explicit solution to your needs.
Hope this will help
SELECT
A.*, B.*, C.*
FROM A
inner join C on(A.id = C.id)
inner join B on(B.cid = C.id)
This is the query I'm performing (without some Joins that are not relevant):
SELECT a.*, c.id
FROM a
LEFT OUTER JOIN b ON a.id = b.id_anunciante
LEFT OUTER JOIN c ON c.id = b.id_rubro
GROUP BY a.id
Each row of "a" is linked with 1 to 5 rows in "b".
The problem is that GROUP BY has performance issues (it takes 10x or more using GROUP BY than not using it). I need to retrieve only one row of each member in "a".
How can I make this faster?
edit: I need to be able to filter by a.id AND/OR c.id. The resultset I should be getting is only 1 row per "valid" member of "a", meaning the rows that match the constraints. Rows that don't match the filters shouldn't be returned.
In my original query, this would be done this way:
SELECT a.*, c.id
FROM a
LEFT OUTER JOIN b ON a.id = b.id_anunciante
LEFT OUTER JOIN c ON c.id = b.id_rubro
WHERE c.id = 1
OR a.id = 1
GROUP BY a.id
a.id, b.id_anunciante, b.id_rubro, c.id are all indexes.
SELECT a.*,
(
SELECT c.id
FROM b
JOIN с
ON c.id = b.id_rubro
WHERE b.id_anunciante = a.id
-- add the ORDER BY condition to define which row will be selected.
LIMIT 1
)
FROM a
Create the index on b (id_anunciante) for this to work faster.
Update:
You don't need the OUTER JOINs here.
Rewrite your query as this:
SELECT a.*, c.id
FROM a
JOIN b
ON b.id_anunciante = a.id
JOIN c
ON c.id = b.id_rubro
WHERE a.id = 1
UNION ALL
SELECT a.*, 1
FROM a
WHERE EXISTS
(
SELECT NULL
FROM c
JOIN b
ON b.id_rubro = c.id
WHERE c.id = 1
AND b.id_anunciante = a.id
)
Add ORDER BY NULL to avoid the implicit sorting MySQL does when doing a group by.
I suppose you have indexes/PKs on a.id, b.id_anunciante, b.id_rubro and c.id ? I guess you could try adding a composite index on (b.id_anunciante, b.id_rubro) if your mysql version is not able to do an index merge.