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I have a db that has multiple columns with follow the "name_*" syntax. Basically I wanna use UPDATE in a query so that it updates the first column where the value of it is equal to ''.

I found this so far:

UPDATE table SET
`name_1` = CASE WHEN `name_1` = '' then 'something' else name_1 end,
`name_2` = CASE WHEN `name_2` = '' then 'something' else name_2 end,
`name_3` = CASE WHEN `name_3` = '' then 'something' else name_3 end
WHERE ID = '$id_example'

Now that would be perfect, except it does all of them. I want to select only the first one, where it equals '' and then set the rest to what they were before.

2 Answers 2

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Selecting first your desired column, that would be a good practice.

"SELECT * FROM table WHERE value= first"

Then

YOUR UPDATE QUERY

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  • That was my first idea, but what if 2 users login in at the same time and both have there SELECT's return that it's empty and it executes a UPDATES. One user will overwrite the other.
    – Garrett R
    Oct 3, 2012 at 1:58
  • I see, are you trying to say if 2 users will logged in every update should be like first come first update or something like user1 updates the first record then user2 would update the second record?
    – Clint Bugs
    Oct 3, 2012 at 2:03
  • Yeah exactly. Then when the entire row is full it will just insert a new row and have all the other columns blank waiting for people to fill it.
    – Garrett R
    Oct 3, 2012 at 2:05
  • adding a column for status at the end of your table would help like "STATUS = TRUE/FALSE" ex: if users login "SELECT MIN(id) FROM tble WHERE status = false"... hope it would help
    – Clint Bugs
    Oct 3, 2012 at 2:10
  • That would work just as well too, but I could also do it like UPDATE table SET 'name_1' = CASE WHEN 'name_1' = '' then 'something' else name_1 end, 'name_2' = CASE WHEN 'name_1' != '' and 'name_2' = '' then 'something' else name_2 end, 'name_3' = CASE WHEN 'name_1' != '' and 'name_2' != '' and 'name_3' = '' then 'something' else name_3 end WHERE ID = '$id_example' Not sure which way would most reliable..?
    – Garrett R
    Oct 3, 2012 at 2:21
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UPDATE table SET
`name_1` = CASE WHEN `name_1` = '' then 'something' else name_1 end,
`name_2` = CASE WHEN `name_1` != '' and `name_2` = '' then 'something' else name_2 end,
`name_3` = CASE WHEN `name_1` != '' and `name_2` != '' and `name_3` = '' then 'something' else name_3 end
WHERE ID = '$id_example'
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  • That will work perfect except I got 18+ columns to check so if there isn't anything better this should work.
    – Garrett R
    Oct 3, 2012 at 2:00

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