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I have a little problem.

This is the SQL code I get:

INSERT INTO matches (match_id, league_name, league_id, test_one) 
VALUES (866860, 'Portugal',1,'testing') 
ON DUPLICATE KEY 
UPDATE league_name = 
  CASE match_id 
    WHEN 866860 
      THEN 'Portugal' END, 
league_id = 
  CASE match_id 
    WHEN 866860 
      THEN 1 END, 
test_one = 
  CASE match_id 
    WHEN 866860 
      THEN 'testing' END

The problem is, that it always insert a new row instead of updating the existing one. Is it because I need to make the "match_id" as AUTO_INCREMENT or anything else (at the moment, my "id" field is AUTO_INCREMENT)

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  • 2
    What is the table definition? It might be missing the appropriate index.
    – ethrbunny
    Jan 15, 2013 at 15:40
  • 1
    You can also use REPLACE INTO: dev.mysql.com/doc/refman/5.0/en/replace.html Jan 15, 2013 at 15:42
  • Here is my structure for "match_id" which the call should check after (d.pr/i/XF6Q) - don't know if I'm missing something there Jan 15, 2013 at 15:42
  • @SimonThomsen, that doesn't like a key. If you have no keys defined, there will never be a duplicate key. Jan 15, 2013 at 15:44
  • @BartFriederichs Is Replace into a better solution that on duplicate key? Jan 15, 2013 at 15:44

2 Answers 2

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AUTO_INCREMENT is irrelevant here. But ON DUPLICATE KEY requires a key. More specifically, a unique key, such as primary key or a unique index.

Given the column names, I suspect that match_id fails to be a primary key.

Update: You also write a complicate set of CASE ... END constructs. Have a look at the VALUES() function.

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You are telling your database to update information "ON DUPLICATE KEY"; if none of the other fields are UNIQUE keys, the database will insert a new row.

You can either SELECT the id before this query (or making it a sub-query) or add another key to this table that will result in a unique value for each row. I don't know about your schema, but you might be able to create a multi-part key which spans match_id and league_id.

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