1

i am doing a table with multiple keyboards or tags, like this:

id |   keyboards
===+================================================
1  |     picture,mountain,animals 
2  |     water,mountain
3  |     sound, mountain
4  |     water, picture, mountain, space, other

and i want to make a select.

SELECT id from table where (mountain,picture,space) in keyboards;

result must be: 1 row

id

4.

please help me.

2
  • Do you mean "keywords" instead of "keyboards"?
    – Bohemian
    Sep 17, 2012 at 1:50
  • sorry, i mean "keywords" instead of "keyboards", and normalizing was the best solution, now i have three tables, and for the moment it works fine, thanks a lot guys. Sep 18, 2012 at 14:05

1 Answer 1

2

You have poor database normalization. Best way to do is to create a table Keyboards

CREATE TABLE Keyboards
(
    Keyboard_ID INT AUTO_INCREMENT,
    KeyBoardName VARCHAR(25),
    CONSTRAINT kbrd_pk PRIMARY KEY (Keyboard_ID),
    CONSTRAINT kbrd_uq UNIQUE(KeyboardName)
)

CREATE table Tags
(
    ID INT AUTO_INCREMENT,
    Keyboard_ID int,
    CONSTRAINT tags_pk PRIMARY KEY (ID),
    CONSTRAINT tags_pk FOREIGN KEY (keyboard_ID) REFERENCES keyboards(keyboard_ID)
)

then reference keyboards.id in tags table.

Then you can do this query,

SELECT id,
FROM   tags a
       INNER JOIN keyboards b
           ON a.keyboard_id = b.keyboard_ID
WHERE  b.keyboardName IN ('mountain','picture','space')
GROUP BY ID
HAVING COUNT(DISTINCT b.keyboardName) = 3

but to answer you question, you can simply do this

select *
from tags
where keyboards like concat('%','mountain','%') AND
      keyboards like concat('%','picture','%') and
      keyboards like concat('%','space','%')

SQLFiddle Demo

5
  • 2
    This doesn't work when the tags are 'mountain','mountain','space': Instead use HAVING SUM(b.keyboardName='mountain') AND SUM(b.keyboardName='picture') AND SUM(b.keyboardName='space') Sep 17, 2012 at 0:43
  • why will you search for duplicate tag? if so, the two mountains are different?
    – John Woo
    Sep 17, 2012 at 0:47
  • @GavinTowey that can eliminated using HAVING COUNT(distinct tag)=3
    – John Woo
    Sep 17, 2012 at 0:58
  • 1
    sure, but in general the pattern I showed is far more flexible. For example what if you wanted to search where it had two specific tags, and didn't have another? Sep 17, 2012 at 1:01
  • Agreed that normalizing the data is the best option. However, I suggest replacing your like concat('%'... with 'RLIKE CONCAT('(^|[ ,])', 'space', '(,|$)'). That will match space wherever it appears in the OP's (inconsistent!) array catenation, and won't match everything %space% would (spaces and triple-space, for instance).
    – pilcrow
    Sep 17, 2012 at 1:20

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