1

I want to insert multiple rows of data into a MySQL database, but only when my order_id field is unique. This is the current query I have, which doesn't work. Lets say a record with an order_id of 2 is already in the table:

INSERT INTO conversion
       (user_id,url_id,order_id,sale,commission,transaction_date,process_date) 
VALUES (1,1,1,'32',0.3995,'2010-11-15 12:15:18','2010-11-15 12:15:18'),
       (3,6,2,'*not-available*',0.001975,'2010-11-15 12:15:18','2010-11-15 12:15:18') 
WHERE (order_id <> 3);

Any help is appreciated.

Tom

4
  • so in your example order_id is 1 for both rows. what do you want to do in such case? what do you want to achieve with order_id <> 1?
    – Unreason
    Nov 15, 2010 at 12:25
  • UNIQUE among VALUES or among the table? If in the case above the table already contains 1, should any of the records make it there?
    – Quassnoi
    Nov 15, 2010 at 12:28
  • Apologies - that's a bad example. Editted.
    – tommizzle
    Nov 15, 2010 at 12:32
  • Unreason & Quassnoi: Unique among the table & values, although the values should never be non-unique anyway.
    – tommizzle
    Nov 15, 2010 at 12:33

3 Answers 3

2

Solved by using REPLACE.

Example:

REPLACE INTO conversion (user_id,url_id,order_id,sale,commission,transaction_date,process_date) VALUES (1,1,3,'32',0.3995,'2010-11-15 12:50:31','2010-11-15 12:50:31'),(1,2,2,'*not-available*',0.001975,'2010-11-15 12:50:31','2010-11-15 12:50:31');

url: http://dev.mysql.com/doc/refman/5.0/en/replace.html

Thanks all.

1
  • heh.I almost included that in my answer, but I decided not to because I didn't think it would solve your specific problem. Ah well, I'm glad you solved it. :)
    – Spudley
    Nov 15, 2010 at 13:40
1

INSERT doesn't support the WHERE clause because if you're inserting it implies that the record doesn't currently exist, so therefore there would be nothing for the WHERE clause to look at.

The way to do it in the example you've given is simply not to call the INSERT statement if the order_id field in your insert doesn't match the criteria you want.

If you're calling INSERT multiple times, you'd have some sort of code (either SQL or an external program) which loops through the rows you're inserting; this would be where you'd filter it.

1

If I am in a similar situation, I would create a stored procedure to handle the logic of figuring out whether an order_id already exists.

--Run this first
--It will create a stored procedure call InsertConversion
--Begin of stored procedure
CREATE PROCEDURE InsertConversion 
    @user_id int,
    @url_id int,
    @order_id int,
    @sale varchar(5),
    @commission money,
    @transaction_date datetime,
    @process_date datetime
AS
BEGIN
    SET NOCOUNT ON;

    if not exists(select order_id from conversion where order_id = @order_id)
    begin
        INSERT INTO conversion(user_id, url_id, order_id, sale, commission, transaction_date, process_date)
        VALUES(@user_id, @url_id, @order_id, @sale, @commission, @transaction_date, @process_date)
    end
END
GO
--End of stored procedure

Once the store procedure created, you can execute it and pass in the same values as you would pass into an INSERT/VALUES statement:

exec InsertConversion 1,1,1,'32',0.3995,'2010-11-15 12:15:18','2010-11-15 12:15:18'
exec InsertConversion 3,6,2,'*not-available*',0.001975,'2010-11-15 12:15:18','2010-11-15 12:15:18'

If you want to be fancy, you can include a couple of 'print' statement in the store procedure to tell you whether it inserts the record.

2
  • Fantastic answer. This definitely seems a lot more clean than my solution. Do you have any idea about the difference in performance?
    – tommizzle
    Nov 16, 2010 at 16:22
  • From my little knowledge of DB performance, I don't see a noticeable difference in performance. Either solution would need to look for an existence of order_id and insert when it doesn't find one. I could be wrong here so don't take my words on this. Nov 17, 2010 at 5:34

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