简体   繁体   中英

Select in MySQL where all rows meet a condition

In MySQL, how can you select data where every row meets a certain condition? For example lets say I have a table showing when employees arrived at work, it has three fields:

CREATE TABLE ArrivalTimes
(UserID INT
,Day DATE 
,ArrivalTime TIME
);

I want to select all UserIDs of employees who have never been late (arrived 9am or earlier), what's the best way to do this?

The answers from @jjclarkson and @davethegr8 are close, but you can't put aggregate functions in the WHERE clause. The WHERE clause is evaluated for each row.

You need to evaluate the MAX() expression for each group, so you need to use a HAVING clause.

Try this:

SELECT UserID 
FROM ArrivalTimes
GROUP BY UserID
HAVING MAX(ArrivalTime) <= '09:00:00';

@MBCook comments that HAVING can be slow. You're right, it might not be the absolute quickest way to produce the desired result. But the HAVING solution is the most clear . There are situations where performance has lower priority than clarity and maintainability.

I looked at the EXPLAIN output (on MySQL 5.1.30) for the HAVING solution: no indexes were used, and the extra notes said " Using temporary; Using filesort ," which usually means performance will be poor.

Consider the following query:

SELECT DISTINCT a1.UserID
FROM ArrivalTimes a1
  LEFT OUTER JOIN ArrivalTimes a2 
  ON (a1.UserID = a2.UserID AND a2.ArrivalTime > '09:00:00')
WHERE a2.UserID IS NULL;

This generates an optimization plan that uses an index on UserID and says:

  • a1: " Using index; Using temporary "
  • a2: " Using where; Distinct "

Finally, the following query generates an optimization plan that appears to use indexes most effectively, and no temp tables or filesort.

SELECT DISTINCT a1.UserID
FROM ArrivalTimes a1
WHERE NOT EXISTS (SELECT * FROM ArrivalTimes a2 
                  WHERE a1.UserID = a2.UserID 
                    AND a2.ArrivalTime > '09:00:00'); 
  • a1: " Using where; Using index "
  • a2: " Using where "

This appears most likely to have the best performance. Admittedly, I only have four rows in my test table, so this isn't a representative test.

you can get the Result more 3 Ways for this Query 1.using Group-By Function 2.using Sub-Query 3.using joins......etc

using Group - By

SELECT userID, MAX(ArrivalTime) as latest FROM ArrivalTimes WHERE latest <= '9:00:00'

GROUP BY userID

using Sub Query With

select * from user a where '09:00:00'

= all( select ArrivalTime from ArrivalTime b where b.UserID = a.ID);


you can also get it using self inner joins

This was a nice thought, but it doesn't work.

SELECT UserID FROM ArrivalTimes WHERE MAX(ArrivalTime) <= '09:00:00' GROUP BY UserID

With this query you will get an error saying: "Invalid use of group function"

Aggregate functions like COUNT, MAX, MIN, AVG, SUM and others by definition perform their function on a set (or group of records) so the MAX(ArrivalTime) needs to be in the form of:

GROUP BY UserID HAVING MAX(ArrivalTime) <= '09:00:00'

See the answer from @Bill Karwin above.

SELECT userID, MAX(ArrivalTime) as latest
FROM ArrivalTimes 
WHERE latest <= '9:00:00'
GROUP BY userID

Bill Karwin suggests:

Try this:

SELECT UserID 
FROM ArrivalTimes
GROUP BY UserID
HAVING MAX(ArrivalTime) <= '09:00:00';

I looked at the EXPLAIN output (on MySQL 5.1.30) for the HAVING solution: no indexes were used, and the extra notes said "Using temporary; Using filesort," which usually means performance will be poor.

I'd submit that the following is even clearer, given that there is a user table to which ArrivalTimes.UserId is a foreign key. This selects all never-tardy users:

 select * from user a 
 where '09:00:00' 
  >= all( select ArrivalTime from ArrivalTime b where b.UserID = a.ID);

This selects any user who was ever tardy:

 select * from user a 
 where '09:00:00' 
  < any( select ArrivalTime from ArrivalTime b where b.UserID = a.ID);

This is clearer because it even more closely conforms to our English/natural language specification.

And it avoids the inefficiency of a group by ; under MySql 5.0.51, it doesn't require a temporary or filesort, as Bill's does.

(Note that it does require that the constant time value be zero-padded, thus: '09:00:00' ; '9:00:00' fails.)

The technical post webpages of this site follow the CC BY-SA 4.0 protocol. If you need to reprint, please indicate the site URL or the original address.Any question please contact:yoyou2525@163.com.

 
粤ICP备18138465号  © 2020-2024 STACKOOM.COM