I am having following database schema, I want to fetch name of all categories with no of quotes related to that category . The query that i wrote giving me one row only can u please tell me the resource efficient query.
SELECT SC.Name, Count(*) AS Quotes
FROM status_categories AS SC
INNER JOIN status_quotes AS SQ ON SC._id = SQ._category_id
GROUP BY SC.Name
SELECT status_categories.NAME, COUNT(status_quotes.category_id)
FROM status_categories JOIN status_quotes ON status_categories._id = status_quotes.category_id
GROUP BY status_categories._id;
Try the following:
SELECT `c`.`name`, COUNT(*) AS `Number of quotes`
FROM `status_categories` AS `c`
INNER JOIN `status_quotes` AS `q`
ON `q`.`category_id` = `c`.`_id`
GROUP BY `c`.`_id`;
EDIT
Feel free to leave out the ` character. But that is the safe way of doing it, even though it looks a bit nasty.
Related
I'm really struggling with this query and I hope somebody can help.
I am querying across multiple tables to get the dataset that I require. The following query is an anonymised version:
SELECT main_table.id,
sub_table_1.field_1,
main_table.field_1,
main_table.field_2,
main_table.field_3,
main_table.field_4,
main_table.field_5,
main_table.field_6,
main_table.field_7,
sub_table_2.field_1,
sub_table_2.field_2,
sub_table_2.field_3,
sub_table_3.field_1,
sub_table_4.field_1,
sub_table_4.field_2
FROM main_table
INNER JOIN sub_table_4 ON sub_table_4.id = main_table.id
INNER JOIN sub_table_2 ON sub_table_2.id = main_table.id
INNER JOIN sub_table_3 ON sub_table_3.id = main_table.id
INNER JOIN sub_table_1 ON sub_table_1.id = main_table.id
WHERE sub_table_4.field_1 = '' AND sub_table_4.field_2 = '0' AND sub_table_2.field_1 != ''
The query works, the problem I have is sub_table_1 has a revision number (int 11). Currently I get duplicate records with different revision numbers and different versions of sub_table_1.field_1 which is to be expected, but I want to limit the result set to only include results limited by the latest revision number, giving me only the latest sub_table_1_field_1 and I really can not figure it out!
Can anybody lend me a hand?
Many Thanks.
It's always important to remember that a JOIN can be on a subquery as well as a table. You could build a subquery that returns the results you want to see then, once you've got the data you want, join it in the parent query.
It's hard to 'tailor' an answer that's specific to you problem, as it's too obfuscated (as you admit) to know what the data and tables really look like, but as an example:
Say table1 has four fields: id, revision_no, name and stuff. You want to return a distinct list of name values, with their latest version of stuff (which, we'll pretend varies by revision). You could do this in isolation as:
select t.* from table1 t
inner join
(SELECT name, max(revision_no) maxr
FROM table1
GROUP BY name) mx
on mx.name = t.name
and mx.maxr = t.revision_no;
(Note: see fiddle at the end)
That would return each individual name with the latest revision of stuff.
Once you've got that nailed down, you could then swap out
INNER JOIN sub_table_1 ON sub_table_1.id = main_table.id
....with....
INNER JOIN (select t.* from table1 t
inner join
(SELECT name, max(revision_no) maxr
FROM table1
GROUP BY name) mx
on mx.name = t.name
and mx.maxr = t.revision_no) sub_table_1
ON sub_table_1.id = main_table.id
...which would allow a join with a recordset that is more tailored to that which you want to join (again, don't get hung up on the actual query I've used, it's just there to demonstrate the method).
There may well be more elegant ways to achieve this, but it's sometimes good to start with a simple solution that's easier to replicate, then simplify it once you've got the general understanding of the what and why nailed down.
Hope that helps - as I say, it's as specific as I could offer without having an idea of the real data you're using.
(for the sake of reference, here is a fiddle with a working version of the above example query)
In your case where you only need one column from the table, make this a subquery in your select clause instead of than a join. You get the latest revision by ordering by revision number descending and limiting the result to one row.
SELECT
main_table.id,
(
select sub_table_1.field_1
from sub_table_1
where sub_table_1.id = main_table.id
order by revision_number desc
limit 1
) as sub_table_1_field_1,
main_table.field_1,
...
FROM main_table
INNER JOIN sub_table_4 ON sub_table_4.id = main_table.id
INNER JOIN sub_table_2 ON sub_table_2.id = main_table.id
INNER JOIN sub_table_3 ON sub_table_3.id = main_table.id
WHERE sub_table_4.field_1 = ''
AND sub_table_4.field_2 = '0'
AND sub_table_2.field_1 != '';
Hey guys I have a dilemma with one of my SELECTS that I use in mySQL DB.
Firstly this is how it looks :
My select is supposed to extract all the users and count each their prezente , when I use this select instead of taking all my users I get this :
SELECT users1.id,users1.Nume, COUNT(pontaj.prezente)
FROM users1, pontaj
WHERE users1.id = pontaj.id
You need to add a GROUP BY clause to your query. Also replace the old join syntax using WHERE clause with recommended JOIN / ON syntax.
SELECT users1.id,users1.Nume, COUNT(pontaj.prezente)
FROM users1
INNER JOIN pontaj
ON users1.id = pontaj.id
GROUP BY users1.id,users1.Nume
I think you should add a group by clause meaning at the end of the SQL add
group by users1.Nume
SELECT DISTINCT users1.id, users1.Nume, COUNT(pontaj.prezente) over (partition by users1.id)
FROM users1
INNER JOIN pontaj ON users1.id = pontaj.id
This is an alternative if you don't want to use the GROUP BY
pontaj.prezente is an INT; perhaps you want SUM(pontaj.prezente) ??
I have the following query:
SELECT
issue.`sequence` AS issue_sequence,
issue.`description` AS issue_description,
GROUP_CONCAT(DISTINCT(issue_category.`name`) SEPARATOR ', ') AS issue_category_name,
GROUP_CONCAT(DISTINCT(approach.`name`) SEPARATOR ', ') AS approach_name,
issue_approach.`issue_id` AS issue_approach_issue_id,
issue_approach.`approach_id` AS issue_approach_approach_id
FROM
`approach` approach
INNER JOIN `issue_approach` issue_approach ON approach.`id` = issue_approach.`approach_id`
INNER JOIN `issue` issue ON issue_approach.`issue_id` = issue.`id`
INNER JOIN `project` project ON issue.`project` = project.`id`
INNER JOIN `tenant` tenant ON project.`tenant_id` = tenant.`id`
INNER JOIN `issue_category` issue_category ON project.`id` = issue_category.`project`
INNER JOIN `user` user ON tenant.`id` = user.`tenant_id`
WHERE user.id = 1 AND project.id = 1
GROUP BY issue_category_name
ORDER BY issue_category.`name`, issue.`sequence`
I am having a problem with this line:
GROUP BY issue_category_name
Apparently, MySQL can't seem to Group by the alias for by GROUP_CONCAT result.
I am not really an expert with SQL, but is there a way I can group using the result of GROUP_CONCAT?
Sample data;
Categories: Network, Servers
Issue Id: 1
Description: Some description
Approaches: Some approaches to resolve the issue.
Basically, an issue can belong to one or many categories. I am concatenating categories for each issue. What i want to do is group the results by the result of concatenation of categories. So for example group issues whose categories are Network,Servers.
Thanks.
Im not a MySQL user, but change your group by to
Group By GROUP_CONCAT(DISTINCT(issue_category.`name`) SEPARATOR ', ')
With reference to SQL EXECUTION ORDER, the reason why this will not work is because the select statement is the last statement to be executed so that sql engine will not be knowing your column alias while grouping the records as GROUP BY occurs before SELECT. So that as Charles Bretana's answer suggests, put
Group By GROUP_CONCAT(DISTINCT(issue_category.`name`) SEPARATOR ', ')
in your group by clause. It will work fine then.
Hope this helps you.
I have the following query:
SELECT PKID, QuestionText, Type
FROM Questions
WHERE PKID IN (
SELECT FirstQuestion
FROM Batch
WHERE BatchNumber IN (
SELECT BatchNumber
FROM User
WHERE RandomString = '$key'
)
)
I've heard that sub-queries are inefficient and that joins are preferred. I can't find anything explaining how to convert a 3+ tier sub-query to join notation, however, and can't get my head around it.
Can anyone explain how to do it?
SELECT DISTINCT a.*
FROM Questions a
INNER JOIN Batch b
ON a.PKID = b.FirstQuestion
INNER JOIN User c
ON b.BatchNumber = c.BatchNumber
WHERE c.RandomString = '$key'
The reason why DISTINCT was specified is because there might be rows that matches to multiple rows on the other tables causing duplicate record on the result. But since you are only interested on records on table Questions, a DISTINCT keyword will suffice.
To further gain more knowledge about joins, kindly visit the link below:
Visual Representation of SQL Joins
Try :
SELECT q.PKID, q.QuestionText, q.Type
FROM Questions q
INNER JOIN Batch b ON q.PKID = b.FirstQuestion
INNER JOIN User u ON u.BatchNumber = q.BatchNumber
WHERE u.RandomString = '$key'
select
q.pkid,
q.questiontext,
q.type
from user u
join batch b
on u.batchnumber = b.batchnumber
join questions q
on b.firstquestion = q.pkid
where u.randomstring = '$key'
Since your WHERE clause filters on the USER table, start with that in the FROM clause. Next, apply your joins backwards.
In order to do this correctly, you need distinct in the subquery. Otherwise, you might multiply rows in the join version:
SELECT q.PKID, q.QuestionText, q.Type
FROM Questions q join
(select distinct FirstQuestion
from Batch b join user u
on b.batchnumber = u.batchnumber and
u.RandomString = '$key'
) fq
on q.pkid = fq.FirstQuestion
As to whether the in or join version is better . . . that depends. In some cases, particularly if the fields are indexed, the in version might be fine.
While working on a system I'm creating, I attempted to use the following query in my project:
SELECT
topics.id,
topics.name,
topics.post_count,
topics.view_count,
COUNT( posts.solved_post ) AS solved_post,
(SELECT users.username AS posted_by,
users.id AS posted_by_id
FROM users
WHERE users.id = posts.posted_by)
FROM topics
LEFT OUTER JOIN posts ON posts.topic_id = topics.id
WHERE topics.cat_id = :cat
GROUP BY topics.id
":cat" is bound by my PHP code as I'm using PDO. 2 is a valid value for ":cat".
That query though gives me an error: "#1241 - Operand should contain 1 column(s)"
What stumps me is that I would think that this query would work no problem. Selecting columns, then selecting two more from another table, and continuing on from there. I just can't figure out what the problem is.
Is there a simple fix to this, or another way to write my query?
Your subquery is selecting two columns, while you are using it to project one column (as part of the outer SELECT clause). You can only select one column from such a query in this context.
Consider joining to the users table instead; this will give you more flexibility when selecting what columns you want from users.
SELECT
topics.id,
topics.name,
topics.post_count,
topics.view_count,
COUNT( posts.solved_post ) AS solved_post,
users.username AS posted_by,
users.id AS posted_by_id
FROM topics
LEFT OUTER JOIN posts ON posts.topic_id = topics.id
LEFT OUTER JOIN users ON users.id = posts.posted_by
WHERE topics.cat_id = :cat
GROUP BY topics.id
In my case, the problem was that I sorrounded my columns selection with parenthesis by mistake:
SELECT (p.column1, p.column2, p.column3) FROM table1 p WHERE p.column1 = 1;
And has to be:
SELECT p.column1, p.column2, p.column3 FROM table1 p WHERE p.column1 = 1;
Sounds silly, but it was causing this error and it took some time to figure it out.
This error can also occur if you accidentally use commas instead of AND in the ON clause of a JOIN:
JOIN joined_table ON (joined_table.column = table.column, joined_table.column2 = table.column2)
^
should be AND, not a comma
This error can also occur if you accidentally use = instead of IN in the WHERE clause:
FOR EXAMPLE:
WHERE product_id = (1,2,3);
COUNT( posts.solved_post ) AS solved_post,
(SELECT users.username AS posted_by,
users.id AS posted_by_id
FROM users
WHERE users.id = posts.posted_by)
Well, you can’t get multiple columns from one subquery like that. Luckily, the second column is already posts.posted_by! So:
SELECT
topics.id,
topics.name,
topics.post_count,
topics.view_count,
posts.posted_by
COUNT( posts.solved_post ) AS solved_post,
(SELECT users.username AS posted_by_username
FROM users
WHERE users.id = posts.posted_by)
...
I got this error while executing a MySQL script in an Intellij console, because of adding brackets in the wrong place:
WRONG:
SELECT user.id
FROM user
WHERE id IN (:ids); # Do not put brackets around list argument
RIGHT:
SELECT user.id
FROM user
WHERE id IN :ids; # No brackets is correct
This error can also occur if you accidentally miss if function name.
for example:
set v_filter_value = 100;
select
f_id,
f_sale_value
from
t_seller
where
f_id = 5
and (v_filter_value <> 0, f_sale_value = v_filter_value, true);
Got this problem when I missed putting if in the if function!
Another place this error can happen in is assigning a value that has a comma outside of a string. For example:
SET totalvalue = (IFNULL(i.subtotal,0) + IFNULL(i.tax,0),0)
(SELECT users.username AS posted_by,
users.id AS posted_by_id
FROM users
WHERE users.id = posts.posted_by)
Here you using sub-query but this sub-query must return only one column.
Separate it otherwise it will shows error.
I also have the same issue in making a company database.
this is the code
SELECT FNAME,DNO FROM EMP
WHERE SALARY IN (SELECT MAX(SALARY), DNO
FROM EMP GROUP BY DNO);