Reputation:
I have two tables
Ordered_Item
ID | Item_Name 1 | Pizza 2 | Stromboli
Ordered_Options
Ordered_Item_ID | Option_Number | Value 1 43 Pepperoni 1 44 Extra Cheese 2 44 Extra Cheese
What I am looking to output is a mysql query is something to this effect
Output
ID | Item_Name | Option_1 | Option_2 1 Pizza Pepperoni Extra Cheese 2 Stromboli NULL Extra Cheese
I have tried numerous options most ending in syntax error, I have tried group_concat but thats not really what I am looking for. I have a crude example below of what I think might be a start. I need the options to be in the same order every time. And in the program where the info is collected there is no way to reliable ensure that will happen. Is it possible to have them concatenate according to option number. Also I know that I will never have over 5 options so a static solution would work
Select Ordered_Items.ID,
Ordered_Items.Item_Name,
FROM Ordered_Items
JOIN (SELECT Ordered_Options.Value FROM Ordered_Options Where Option_Number = 43) as Option_1
ON Ordered_Options.Ordered_Item_ID = Ordered_Item.ID
JOIN (SELECT Ordered_Options.Value FROM Ordered_Options Where Option_Number = 44) as Option_2
ON Ordered_Options.Ordered_Item_ID = Ordered_Item.ID;
Upvotes: 88
Views: 149061
Reputation: 1525
Joe Edel's answer to himself is actually the right approach to resolve the pivot problem.
Basically the idea is to list out the columns in the base table firstly, and then any number of options.value
from the joint option table. Just left join
the same option table multiple times in order to get all the options.
What needs to be done by the programming language is to build this query dynamically according to a list of options needs to be queried.
Upvotes: -2
Reputation: 109
Here is how you would construct your query for this type of requirement.
select ID,Item_Name,max(Flavor) as Flavor,max(Extra_Cheese) as Extra_Cheese
from (select i.*,
case when o.Option_Number=43 then o.value else null end as Flavor,
case when o.Option_Number=44 then o.value else null end as Extra_Cheese
from Ordered_Item i,Ordered_Options o) a
group by ID,Item_Name;
You basically "case out" each column using case when
, then select the max()
for each of those columns using group by
for each intended item.
Upvotes: 2
Reputation: 24096
If you really need multiple columns in your result, and the amount of options is limited, you can even do this:
select
ordered_item.id as `Id`,
ordered_item.Item_Name as `ItemName`,
if(ordered_options.id=1,Ordered_Options.Value,null) as `Option1`,
if(ordered_options.id=2,Ordered_Options.Value,null) as `Option2`,
if(ordered_options.id=43,Ordered_Options.Value,null) as `Option43`,
if(ordered_options.id=44,Ordered_Options.Value,null) as `Option44`,
GROUP_CONCAT(if(ordered_options.id not in (1,2,43,44),Ordered_Options.Value,null)) as `OtherOptions`
from
ordered_item,
ordered_options
where
ordered_item.id=ordered_options.ordered_item_id
group by
ordered_item.id
Upvotes: 6
Reputation:
I appreciate the help, I do think I have found a solution if someone would comment on the effectiveness I would appreciate it. Essentially what I did is. I realize it is somewhat static in its implementation but I does what I need it to do (forgive incorrect syntax)
SELECT
ordered_item.id as `Id`,
ordered_item.Item_Name as `ItemName`,
Options1.Value
Options2.Value
FROM ORDERED_ITEMS
LEFT JOIN (Ordered_Options as Options1)
ON (Options1.Ordered_Item.ID = Ordered_Options.Ordered_Item_ID
AND Options1.Option_Number = 43)
LEFT JOIN (Ordered_Options as Options2)
ON (Options2.Ordered_Item.ID = Ordered_Options.Ordered_Item_ID
AND Options2.Option_Number = 44);
Upvotes: 15
Reputation:
If you know you're going to have a limited number of max options then I would try this (example for max of 4 options per order):
Select OI.ID, OI.Item_Name, OO1.Value, OO2.Value, OO3.Value, OO4.Value FROM Ordered_Items OI LEFT JOIN Ordered_Options OO1 ON OO1.Ordered_Item_ID = OI.ID LEFT JOIN Ordered_Options OO2 ON OO2.Ordered_Item_ID = OI.ID AND OO2.ID != OO1.ID LEFT JOIN Ordered_Options OO3 ON OO3.Ordered_Item_ID = OI.ID AND OO3.ID != OO1.ID AND OO3.ID != OO2.ID LEFT JOIN Ordered_Options OO4 ON OO4.Ordered_Item_ID = OI.ID AND OO4.ID != OO1.ID AND OO4.ID != OO2.ID AND OO4.ID != OO3.ID GROUP BY OI.ID, OI.Item_Name
The group by condition gets rid of all of the duplicates that you would otherwise get. I've just implemented something similar on a site I'm working on where I knew I'd always have 1 or 2 matched in my child table, and I wanted to make sure I only had 1 row for each parent item.
Upvotes: 4
Reputation: 24096
The easiest way would be to make use of the GROUP_CONCAT group function here..
select
ordered_item.id as `Id`,
ordered_item.Item_Name as `ItemName`,
GROUP_CONCAT(Ordered_Options.Value) as `Options`
from
ordered_item,
ordered_options
where
ordered_item.id=ordered_options.ordered_item_id
group by
ordered_item.id
Which would output:
Id ItemName Options
1 Pizza Pepperoni,Extra Cheese
2 Stromboli Extra Cheese
That way you can have as many options as you want without having to modify your query.
Ah, if you see your results getting cropped, you can increase the size limit of GROUP_CONCAT like this:
SET SESSION group_concat_max_len = 8192;
Upvotes: 145
Reputation: 340286
What you want is called a pivot, and it's not directly supported in MySQL, check this answer out for the options you've got:
How to pivot a MySQL entity-attribute-value schema
Upvotes: 3