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I have two tables, one with products and another with ratings.

I want to list all products and if a user has rated the product (then r.by is the userId and r.rating is the rating) then I want to add a userrating=r.rating else userrating=0 to the SQL response.

It works with only one user, so I don't know what's wrong with it.

    $sql = "SELECT DISTINCT p.id, p.rating, CASE WHEN r.by=:USER_ID
           THEN r.rating ELSE 0 END AS userrating FROM `products` p 
           LEFT OUTER JOIN `ratings` r
           ON r.productid=p.id 
           WHERE p.moderated=1
           order by p.rating desc";

EDIT:

I need to list all the products, and if a user has rated the product, I need the users rating attached as "userrating"=(the users rating).

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  • r.by=:USER_ID is assigning a value if a specific user id matches.
    – PinnyM
    Jun 11, 2013 at 13:39
  • "It works with only one user, so I don't know what's wrong with it." Hmmm, maybe there is nothing wrong with it and you don't have a question. What is the question, by the way? Jun 11, 2013 at 13:39
  • If the product doesn't have any associated ratings, then r.rating and r.by will be NULL. Isn't that enough to go on? You could have something like CASE WHEN r.by IS NULL THEN r.rating ELSE 0 END, or the more compact COALESCE(r.rating, 0), or the even more compact (and probably more correct) r.rating, which will give the rating as NULL (not rated) rather than zero (presumably rated very, very poorly).
    – Ed Gibbs
    Jun 11, 2013 at 13:43
  • Please read the edit, if in doubt. Jun 11, 2013 at 14:05

1 Answer 1

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Change:

SELECT DISTINCT p.id, p.rating, CASE WHEN r.by=:USER_ID

To:

SELECT DISTINCT p.id, p.rating, CASE WHEN r.by IS NOT NULL

Even simpler, you can replace the CASE statement with COALESCE:

SELECT DISTINCT p.id, p.rating, COALESCE(r.rating, 0) AS userrating 
FROM `products` p
...

Note that if several users gave different ratings on a single product, you'll get multiple rows returned - one for each distinct rating value.

UPDATE

To get the ratings for a single user id (passed as USER_ID), the simplest method would be to filter on the outer join itself:

SELECT DISTINCT p.id, p.rating, COALESCE(r.rating, 0) AS userrating 
FROM `products` p 
LEFT OUTER JOIN `ratings` r
  ON r.productid=p.id AND r.by=:USER_ID
WHERE p.moderated=1
ORDER BY p.rating desc
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  • If a user has rated the product, then the rating should the whatever he/she rated. This solution seems to give the latest (or first?) rating - not the current user's rating. Jun 11, 2013 at 14:03
  • @KennethB: The original answer was for all users - updated to explain how this would work for a specific user.
    – PinnyM
    Jun 11, 2013 at 14:13

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