I have a table with a list of ranks for a character, each associated with a numeric value (xp). Higher the rank is more XP is needed. I would like to know the easiest way to construct a query to find to which rank the character belongs. The idea is to use it is a subquery, so when selecting the character
SELECT name, xp FROM characters
I would be able to get the character rank based on the amount of XP. If I use two columns in the ranks table for min and max XP needed it is easy:
SELECT
name, xp
(SELECT rank FROM ranks WHERE xp BETWEEN xp_min AND xp_max) as rank
FROM characters
but I'd like to have it done with just one column for the lower boundary of rank
UPDATE:
looks like INTERVAL
here is a red herring, keeping it for search purposes
I could use INTERVAL()
function (MySQL Documentation) for this if I construct the query programatically:
SELECT INTERVAL(character_xp, rank1, rank2, rank3, rank4)
But is there a way to use a sub-query to achieve this? The following does not work
SELECT INTERVAL(character_xp, (SELECT rank FROM ranks ORDER by rank))
And neither does this:
SELECT INTERVAL(character_xp, (SELECT GROUP_CONCAT(rank ORDER BY rank) FROM ranks));
Any advice?