4

Here are my different tables:

computers (id,name)
monitors (id,name)
computer_monitor (id, computer_id,monitor_id)
useractivity (id,userid,timestamp,computer_monitor_id,ip)
useropinion (id,userid,computer_monitor_id,timestamp,rating)
user (id,name,email)

I want to search after the name of computer or monitor and get a row like this in return:

computer name and/or monitor name
computer_monitor_id
avg(rate)
count(useractivity)

avg(rate) is on that specific computer_monitor_id that matches the name, the same goes for count.

A computer with no connection to monitor has a value of 0 on monitor field in computer_monitor table and vice versa for monitor->computer.

useractivity and useropinion only contains the ID from computer_monitor table

2
  • @Siva, I reintroduced the OP's and/or wording in desired output. (Normally I understand "foo/bar" to mean "foo (exclusive) or bar".)
    – pilcrow
    Apr 29, 2012 at 15:36
  • By avg(rate) you meant avg(rating), didn't you?
    – Andriy M
    Apr 29, 2012 at 15:55

3 Answers 3

1

As I understand, the query should be built around the computer_monitor table. All other tables connect to it, including those from which you want to obtain the stats.

SELECT
  c.name AS ComputerName,
  m.name AS MonitorName,
  uo.AverageRating,
  ua.ActivityCount
FROM computer_monitor cm
  LEFT JOIN computer c ON c.id = cm.computer
  LEFT JOIN monitor  m ON m.id = cm.monitor

  INNER JOIN (
    SELECT computer_monitor_id, AVG(rating) AS AverageRating
    FROM useropinion
    GROUP BY computer_monitor_id
  ) uo ON cm.id = uo.computer_monitor_id

  INNER JOIN (
    SELECT computer_monitor_id, COUNT(*) AS ActivityCount
    FROM useractivity
    GROUP BY computer_monitor_id
  ) ua ON cm.id = ua.computer_monitor_id

Actually, as you can see, useropinion and useractivity are aggregated first, then joined. This is to avoid the Cartesian product effect when a computer_monitor.id matches more than one row both in useropinion and in useractivity.

6
  • ok, Super SWEET, altmost there. But how if I would like to see those with no useractivity also ?? So that activity count becomes zero. In the case that I have useractivity with only a couple of rows, and computers>1000, I want to be able to search on everyone.
    – TimTimTim
    Apr 29, 2012 at 17:31
  • @TimTimTim: You can always replace INNER JOIN with LEFT JOIN, if I'm not misunderstanding you. Accordingly, replace ua.ActivityCount in the select list with COALESCE(ua.ActivityCount) AS ActivityCount if you want to see 0s instead of NULLs.
    – Andriy M
    Apr 29, 2012 at 17:45
  • Jeah, thank you! the only thing i'm missing now is search on both c.name and m.name. One or the other works, but not both--> where c.name LIKE '%$name%' = works, but I want the result from both c.name and m.name? Any Idea?
    – TimTimTim
    Apr 29, 2012 at 18:24
  • Any Idea how I could add a computer_monitor_id to one row, and from a new table comment(id,timestamp,userid,computer_monitor), add a row for newest timestamp. Pluss add row for count of rating as a the last.
    – TimTimTim
    May 1, 2012 at 8:08
  • @TimTimTim: 1) Re: add computer_monitor_id – not sure I've understood you, perhaps you just need to include something like uo.computer_monitor_id or ua.computer_monitor_id in the select list. 2) Re: add latest row from comment – search SO for questions tagged as greatest-n-per-group + mysql, that should get you started, I think. If you are still struggling, please ask a new question about how to combine retrieving last comments with whatever query you end up by that moment.
    – Andriy M
    May 1, 2012 at 9:44
0
<?php
$res_comp = mysql_query("select * from computers where name = '$name'");
$res_monitor = mysql_query("select * from monitor where name = '$name'");
if(mysql_num_rows($res_comp) > 0)
{
$row_comp = mysql_fetch_array($res_comp);
$comp_id = $row_comp['id'];
$res_result = mysql_query("select computers.name, computer_monitor.id, count(computer_monitor_id) from computers, computer_monitor, useractivity where computers.id = '$comp_id' AND computer_monitor_id = '$comp_id' AND useractivity.computer_monitor_id = '$comp_id'");

}
// repeat the same for monitor also. then use mysql_fetch_array to show your data.
?>

hopefully this will help.

1
  • || bo_computers.id = '$comp_id' AND computer_monitor_id = '$comp_id' || bo.computer.id and computer_monitor_id is not the same ID. computer_monitor_id is the ID to the connection beetween monitor_id and computer_id
    – TimTimTim
    Apr 29, 2012 at 17:06
0

This might do the trick...(one table with the computer/monitor relation ship, the other with a xref table threw me, and check the join types depending on your data)

SELECT computers.name AS ComputerName
    , monitors.name AS MonitorName
    , AVG(useropinion.rating) AS AvgRating
    , COUNT(useractivity.id) AS ActivityCount
FROM computers
INNER JOIN computer_monitor ON (computers.id = computer_monitor.computer_id)
INNER JOIN useractivity ON (computers.id = useractivity.computer_id)
INNER JOIN monitors ON (computer_monitor.monitor_id = monitors.id)
INNER JOIN useropinion ON (computer_monitor.id = useropinion.computer_monitor_id) AND (monitors.id = useractivity.monitor_id)
INNER JOIN USER ON (useropinion.user_id = user.id) AND (useractivity.user_id = user.id)
1
  • AND monitors.id = useractivity.monitor_id, I dont have monitor_id in useractivity only the connction ID. I wonder if I should use (computer_monitor.id = useractivity.computer_montior_id) instead??
    – TimTimTim
    Apr 29, 2012 at 16:40

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