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I have two tables in MySQL both with timeseries like:

  • Table 1
  • "time" "open" "high" "low" "close"
  • "2014.01.15 00:20" "1244.25" "1244.28" "1243.88" "1243.91"
  • "2014.01.15 00:15" "1244.24" "1244.36" "1244.16" "1244.22"
  • "2014.01.15 00:10" "1244.62" "1244.63" "1244.16" "1244.21"

  • Table 2

  • "time" "open" "high" "low" "close"
  • "2014.01.15 00:20" "27.378" "27.378" "27.377" "27.378"
  • "2014.01.15 00:15" "27.379" "27.379" "27.377" "27.377"
  • "2014.01.15 00:10" "27.378" "27.378" "27.377" "27.378"

Now, I need to create a 3rd table that will be created by multiplying relevant values.

  • "2014.01.15 00:20" 1244.25*27.378 1244.28*27.378 1243.88*27.377 1243.91*27.378

So far it should not be difficult, but the issue is that both the tables are updating nearly in real-time - every few seconds. Not the whole table of course, but the latest row.

Now, how can I multiply the 2 original tables and create the new one that would be also updated with such a frequency - automatically every few seconds?

What approach would you suggest? Use cron, or?

BTW - sorry, not an IT guy. Need to find a general solution how to do this.

Thanks.

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  • Is there a compelling reason why you can't make the two tables into a single table, and then just perform the calculations within the table when the row is updated?
    – DiMono
    Jan 14, 2014 at 23:45
  • probably you can use triggers
    – b.b3rn4rd
    Jan 14, 2014 at 23:45
  • Please format your question properly
    – Strawberry
    Jan 14, 2014 at 23:58
  • View - the new table will be accessed by php to display it on web. I assumed it is better to calculate it once when genereting the new table than everytime when it is displayed on web.
    – hro1979
    Jan 15, 2014 at 7:10

1 Answer 1

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Your third table is entirely derived from your first two, so you can implement it as a query or a view.

 SELECT a.open*b.open AS open,
        a.high*b.high AS high,
        a.low *b.low  AS low,
        a.close*b.close AS close
   FROM table1 AS a
   JOIN table2 AS b ON a.time = b.time

It's not clear from your question why you need a separate table with actual data in it.

edit

Put indexes on the time columns of both tables.

If you want to retrieve only rows in, say, the last 24 hours, conclude the query with

 WHERE a.time >= NOW() - INTERVAL 1 DAY
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  • All the tables are rather large - thousands of rows. With the last one updating nearly every second. The new table would be accessed by php to display on a website - the whole table. For load purpose reasons I assumed it would be better to do the calculations once - when creating the new table than every time when displaying the new one for each user on web.
    – hro1979
    Jan 15, 2014 at 7:02

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