11

I've got a table, called faq_questions with the following structure:

id int not_null auto_increment,
question varchar(255),
sort_order int

I'm attempting to build a query that given a sort order, selects the row with the next highest sort order.

Example:

id  question                sort_order
1   'This is question 1'    10
2   'This is question 2'    9
3   'This is another'       8
4   'This is another one'   5
5   'This is yet another'   4

Ok, so imagine I pass in 5 for my known sort order (id 4), I need it to return the row with id 3. Since there's no guarantee that sort_order will be contiguous I can't just select known_sort_order + 1.

Thanks!

4 Answers 4

22

It seems too simple, but it looks like what you need:

SELECT id,question FROM `questions` 
WHERE `sort_order` > sort_order_variable
ORDER BY sort_order ASC 
LIMIT 1
9
  • Be sure to ORDER BY sort_order DESC otherwise you will get weird results Dec 11, 2008 at 21:20
  • 1
    ASC, since he wants the next lowest entry Dec 11, 2008 at 21:20
  • Whoops, I saw ID = 3 and thought he meant sort_order =3 . You got it :D Dec 11, 2008 at 21:24
  • And there's no reason to put quotes around the sort order variable if it's an integer (and it might interfere with the optimizer). Dec 11, 2008 at 21:26
  • < since he wants the next lowest (3 < 5) Dec 11, 2008 at 21:38
3
SELECT * FROM table_name WHERE sort_order > 5 ORDER BY sort_order ASC LIMIT 1
2

You can do it with TOP or LIMIT:

SELECT TOP 1 * FROM faq_questions
WHERE sort_order > 5
ORDER BY sort_order ASC

but that's not as elegant or portable as

SELECT *  
FROM faq_questions AS f1  
LEFT JOIN faq_questions AS f2  
    ON f1.sort_order > f2.sort_order  
    AND f2.sort_order = 5  
LEFT JOIN faq_questions AS f3  
    ON f3.sort_order BETWEEN f1.sort_order AND f2.sort_order  
WHERE f3.id IS NULL
4
  • "TOP N" is a nonstandard Microsoft/Sybase feature. MySQL does not support it. Dec 11, 2008 at 21:21
  • Right, that's why I put LIMIT (since I didn't notice the title, the only place where MySQL was identified.) :) Is LIMIT an SQL standard?
    – dkretz
    Dec 11, 2008 at 21:25
  • No, LIMIT is nonstandard SQL. As far as I know, it's supported only by MySQL/PostgreSQL/SQLite. Dec 11, 2008 at 21:27
  • That's what I thought - any record-count limit is non-standard (which Codd and Date would appreciate, I imagine.) So my "portable" assertion is ok. :)
    – dkretz
    Dec 11, 2008 at 21:36
0
SELECT 
    id, question, sort_order
FROM faq_questions 
WHERE sort_order in 
(SELECT 
        MIN(sort_order) 
    FROM faq_questions 
    WHERE sort_order > ?);

That seems to work

1
  • Yes, that works. You can also use = instead of IN, since the subquery returns a single value. Dec 11, 2008 at 21:29

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.