Reputation: 2957
I have these two tables - user_schedules
and user_schedule_meta
, shown below:
------------------------------------
| id | scheduler_id | status |
------------------------------------
1 3 pending
2 5 active
3 6 active
and
----------------------------------------------
| id | user_schedule_id | meta_key |meta_value
----------------------------------------------
1 3 course-id 135
2 3 session-id 15
3 3 schedule-id 120
I want to write a query to enable me select, for example, from both tables where EVERYONE of the below 5 conditions are met:
This is what I have so far, but it is not working:
SELECT user_schedule_meta.`id` FROM user_schedule_meta, user_schedules
WHERE user_schedules.`scheduler_id` = 6
AND user_schedules.id = user_schedule_meta.`user_schedule_id`
AND (
(user_schedule_meta.`meta_key` = 'course-id' AND user_schedule_meta.`meta_value` = 135)
OR (user_schedule_meta.`meta_key` = 'session-id' AND user_schedule_meta.`meta_value` = 15)
OR (user_schedule_meta.`meta_key` = 'daily-schedule-id' AND user_schedule_meta.`meta_value` = 120)
)
GROUP BY user_schedule_meta.`id`
Any suggestions what I am not doing right?
Upvotes: 0
Views: 53
Reputation: 101
try this is code
select * from user_schedule_meta where user_schedule_id=3 and
(meta_key='session-id' AND meta_value=15
or meta_key='daily-schedule-id' AND meta_value=120
or meta_key='course-id' AND meta_value=135
)
Upvotes: 0
Reputation: 108641
This is a typical key-value store lookup problem. These are trickier than they look in SQL, in that they require multiple JOIN operations.
You need a virtual table with one row per user_schedules.id
value, then you can filter it. So
SELECT u.id, u.scheduler_id
FROM user_schedules u
JOIN user_schedule_meta a ON u.id=a.user_schedule_id AND a.meta_key='course-id'
JOIN user_schedule_meta b ON u.id=b.user_schedule_id AND b.meta_key='session-id'
JOIN user_schedule_meta c ON u.id=c.user_schedule_id AND c.meta_key='daily-schedule-id'
WHERE a.meta_value = 135 -- value associated with course-id
AND b.meta_value=15 -- value associated with session-id
AND c.meta_value=120 -- value associated with daily-schedule-id
Notice also that you can list your table with associated attributes like this. This trick of joining the key/value table multiple times is a kind of pivot operation. I use LEFT JOIN because it will allow the result set to show rows where an attribute is missing.
SELECT u.id, u.scheduler_id, u.status,
a.meta_value AS course_id,
b.meta_value AS session_id,
c.meta_value AS daily_schedule_id
FROM user_schedules u
LEFT JOIN user_schedule_meta a ON u.id=a.user_schedule_id AND a.meta_key='course-id'
LEFT JOIN user_schedule_meta b ON u.id=b.user_schedule_id AND b.meta_key='session-id'
LEFT JOIN user_schedule_meta c ON u.id=c.user_schedule_id AND c.meta_key='daily-schedule-id'
Upvotes: 2