I'm trying to get the 5 most occurring IDs in my table, my table looks like this:
+-----------+---------------------+---------+---------+
| mashup_id | mashup_time | user_id | deal_id |
+-----------+---------------------+---------+---------+
| 1 | 2011-08-24 21:58:22 | 1 | 23870 |
+-----------+---------------------+---------+---------+
I was thinking of doing a query with a sub-query, something that orders by the count of deal_id? Not exactly sure how to go about it though, if anyone can help, thanks!
In (sort of) generic SQL:
SELECT deal_id, COUNT(*)
FROM your_table
GROUP BY deal_id
ORDER BY COUNT(*) DESC
LIMIT 5
If you meant a different ID field, just substitute it for deal_id.
Related
I am trying to do a very complex query (at least extremely complex for me not for YOU :) )
I have users and comments table.
SQL Fiddle: http://sqlfiddle.com/#!9/b1f845/2
select user_id, status_id from comments where user_id in (2,3);
+---------+-----------+
| user_id | status_id |
+---------+-----------+
| 2 | 10 |
| 2 | 10 |
| 2 | 10 |
| 2 | 7 |
| 2 | 7 |
| 2 | 10 |
| 3 | 9 |
| 2 | 9 |
| 2 | 6 |
+---------+-----------+
If I use
select user_id, status_id from comments where user_id in (2,3)
It returns a lot of duplicate values.
What I want to get if possible.
If you see status_id = 10 has user_id= 2,3 and 4 and 2 multiple times.
So from here I want to get maximum of latest user_id (unique) so for example,
it will be user_id = 4 and 2 now the main complex part. I now want to get users information of user_id= 4 and 2 in one column so that at the end I can get something like this
status_id | userOneUserName | userTwoUserName
10 sadek4 iamsadek2
---------------------------------------------
7 | iamsadek2 | null
---------------------------------------------
9 . | iamsadek2 | sadek2
---------------------------------------------
6 | iamsadek2 | null
How can I achieve such a complex things.
Currently I have to do it using application logic.
Thank you for your time.
I think this might be what you literally want here:
SELECT DISTINCT
status_id,
(SELECT MAX(user_id) FROM comments c2 WHERE c1.status_id = c2.status_id) user_1,
(SELECT user_id FROM comments c2 WHERE c1.status_id = c2.status_id
ORDER BY user_id LIMIT 1 OFFSET 1) user_2
FROM comments c1
WHERE user_id IN (2,3);
Demo (your update Fiddle)
We can use correlated subqueries to find the max user_id and second-to-max user_id for each status_id, and then spin each of those out as two separate columns. Using a GROUP_CONCAT approach might be preferable here, since it would also allow you to easily accommodate any numbers of users as a CSV list.
Also, if you were using MySQL 8+ or greater, then we could take advantage of the rank analytic functions, which would also be easier.
select status_id, GROUP_CONCAT(distinct(user_id) SEPARATOR ',')
from comments
group by status_id
I would suggest using GROUP BY and GROUP_CONCAT, e.g. like so:
SELECT status_id, GROUP_CONCAT(userName) AS users, GROUP_CONCAT(DISTINCT c.user_id) AS user_ids
FROM (
SELECT DISTINCT status_id, user_id FROM comments WHERE user_id in (2,3)
) c
JOIN users u ON (c.user_id = u.id)
GROUP BY status_id
ORDER BY status_id DESC
I am not very good at sql but I am getting there. I have searched stackoverflow but I can't seem to find the solution and I hope someone out there can help me. I have a table (users) with data like the following. The book_id column is a key to another table that contains a book the user is subscribed to.
|--------|---------------------|------------------|
| id | book_id | name |
|--------|---------------------|------------------|
| 1 | 1 | jim |
| 2 | 1 | joyce |
| 3 | 1 | mike |
| 4 | 1 | eleven |
| 5 | 2 | max |
| 6 | 2 | dustin |
| 7 | 2 | lucas |
|--------|---------------------|------------------|
I have a function in my PHP code that returns two random users from a specific book id (either 1 or 2). Query one returns the result in column 1 and result two returns the results in column 2 like:
|---------------------|------------------|
| 1 | 2 |
|---------------------|------------------|
| jim | max |
| joyce | dustin |
|---------------------|------------------|
I have achieved this by running two separate queries as seen below. I want to know if it's possible to achieve this functionality with one query and how.
$random_users_with_book_id_1 = SELECT name FROM users WHERE book_id=1 LIMIT 2
$random_users_with_book_id_2 = SELECT name FROM users WHERE book_id=2 LIMIT 2
Again, I apologise if it's too specific. The query below has been closest to what I was trying to achieve.:
SELECT a.name AS book_id_1, b.name AS book_id_2
FROM users a, users b
WHERE a.book_id=1 AND b.book_id = 2
LIMIT 2
EDIT: I have created a fiddle to play around with his. I appreciate any help! Thank you!! http://sqlfiddle.com/#!9/7fcbca/1
It is easy actually :)
you can use UNION like this:
SELECT * FROM (
(SELECT * FROM user WHERE n_id=1 LIMIT 2)
UNION
(SELECT * FROM user WHERE n_id=2 LIMIT 2))
collection;
if you read this article about the documentation you can use the () to group the individual queries and the apply the union in the middle. Without the parenthesis it would still LIMIT 2 and show only the two first. Ref. "To apply ORDER BY or LIMIT to an individual SELECT, place the clause inside the parentheses that enclose the SELECT:"
If you want to combine the queries in MySQL, you can just use parentheses:
(SELECT name
FROM users
WHERE n_id = 1
LIMIT 2
) UNION ALL
(SELECT name
FROM users
WHERE n_id = 2
LIMIT 2
);
First, only use UNION if you specifically want to incur the overhead of removing duplicates. Otherwise, use UNION ALL.
Second, this does not return random rows. This returns arbitrary rows. In many cases, this might be two rows near the beginning of the data. If you want random rows, then use ORDER BY rand():
(SELECT name
FROM users
WHERE n_id = 1
ORDER by rand()
LIMIT 2
) UNION ALL
(SELECT name
FROM users
WHERE n_id = 2
ORDER BY rand()
LIMIT 2
);
There are other methods that are more efficient, but this should be fine for up to a few thousand rows.
I want to show first two top voted Posts then others sorted by id
This is table
+----+-------+--------------+--------+
| Id | Name | Post | Votes |
+====+=======+==============+========+
| 1 | John | John's msg | -6 |
| 2 |Joseph |Joseph's msg | 8 |
| 3 | Ivan | Ivan's msg | 3 |
| 4 |Natalie|Natalie's msg | 10 |
+----+-------+--------------+--------+
After query result should be:
+----+-------+--------------+--------+
| Id | Name | Post | Votes |
+====+=======+==============+========+
| 4 |Natalie|Natalie's msg | 10 |
| 2 |Joseph |Joseph's msg | 8 |
-----------------------------------------------
| 1 | John | John's msg | -6 |
| 3 | Ivan | Ivan's msg | 3 |
+----+-------+--------------+--------+
I have 1 solution but i feel like there is better and faster way to do it.
I run 2 queries, one to get top 2, then second to get others:
SELECT * FROM table order by Votes desc LIMIT 2
SELECT * FROM table order by Id desc
And then in PHP i make sure that i show 1st query as it is, and on displaying 2nd query i remove entry's that are in 1st query so they don't double.
Can this be done in single query to select first two top voted, then others?
You would have to use subqueries or union - meaning you have a single outer query, which contains multiple queries inside. I would simply retrieve the IDs from the first query and add a id not in (...) criterion to the where clause of the 2nd query - thus filtering out the posts retrieved in the first query:
SELECT * FROM table WHERE Id NOT IN (...) ORDER BY Id DESC
With union the query would look like as follows:
(SELECT table.*, 1 as o FROM table order by Votes desc LIMIT 2)
UNION
(SELECT table.*, 0 FROM table
WHERE Id NOT IN (SELECT Id FROM table order by Votes desc LIMIT 2))
ORDER BY o DESC, if(o=1,Votes,Id) DESC
As you can see, it wraps 3 queries into one and has a more complicated ordering as well because in union the order of the records retrieved is not guaranteed.
Two simple queries seem to be a lot more efficient to me in this particular case.
There could be different ways to write a query that returns the rows in the order you want. My solution is this:
select
table.*
from
table left join (select id from table order by votes desc limit 2) l
on table.id = l.id
order by
case when l.id is not null then votes end desc,
tp.id
the subquery will return the first two id ordered by votes desc, the join will succeed whenever the row is one of the first two otherwise l.id will be null instead.
The order by will order by number of votes desc whenever the row is the first or the second (=l.id is not null), when l.id is null it will put the rows at the bottom and order by id instead.
So I have this table, three of the columns are:
So I wanna get the id_keg, and the persen (SELECT DISTINCT).
The persen is the average of persen with the same id_keg.
The result will be pretty much like this:
----------------------
| id_keg | persen |
----------------------
| 202 | 98.00 |
| 101 | 98.89 |
| 102 | 96.43 |
----------------------
I can't seem to find the way to do this. I want to get id_keg and the persen.
I only understand this and I know this won't do:
SELECT AVG (persen) WHERE id_keg=202 FROM laporan.
You need group by while using the aggregate function avg
select
id_keg, avg(persen) as persen
from laporan group by id_keg
You need a Group By clause:
SELECT id_keg, AVG(persen) FROM laporan GROUP BY id_keg
Here is my table
+----+---------------+-------+
| id | product name | cat |
+----+---------------+-------+
| 0 | product A | 1 |
| 1 | product B | 2 |
| 2 | product C | 1 |
| 3 | product D | 3 |
+----+---------------+-------+
The output I'm trying to achieve is:
Product A
Product C
Product B
Product D
Here's the query I'm working with:
SELECT * FROM products GROUP BY cat ORDER BY id ASC
Now I'm very inexperienced with MySQL, and in-short I'm trying to group my results, and order them within their groups.
The above query (verbatim) gives me a syntax error.
After a little research, (seeing some posts with similar problems) I think I may need to use a JOIN to complete this functionality. But I have no idea where to begin with this.
Can anybody help?
Not sure you need grouping here. Try this:
SELECT * from products ORDER BY cat ASC, id ASC
This sorts first by cat and then by id. Note that you should have an index on the cat field to optimize this query (I already assume that id is primary key).
It seems to me that you need to
SELECT * FROM products ORDER BY cat ASC
to get the output you are looking for.