30

I have more than 500 rows with in my Database Table with particular date.

To query the rows with particular date.

select * from msgtable where cdate='18/07/2012'

This returns 500 rows.

How to query these 500 rows by 10 rows step by step. Query First 10 Rows and show in browser,then query next 10 rows and show in browser?

2

7 Answers 7

68

Just use the LIMIT clause.

SELECT * FROM `msgtable` WHERE `cdate`='18/07/2012' LIMIT 10

And from the next call you can do this way:

SELECT * FROM `msgtable` WHERE `cdate`='18/07/2012' LIMIT 10 OFFSET 10

More information on OFFSET and LIMIT on LIMIT and OFFSET.

6
  • 7
    Don't use backticks. You don't need them in this example to begin with, not even in MySQL. And you shouldn't use backticks to quote identifiers, ever. Use standard-compliant double quotes instead. Backticks are not ANSI-SQL compliant and don't work anywhere outside MySQL - where you don't have to use them either. Employ the ANSI_QUOTES setting of MySQL to get rid of this for good. Sep 18, 2012 at 14:00
  • 1
    @ErwinBrandstetter I seriously don't understand. We need to use backticks for table names and user defined structure right? Sep 18, 2012 at 14:22
  • 2
    You only need double quotes or backticks for identifiers if they contain special characters or reserved words. Use the mentioned ANSI_QUOTES setting and be done with backticks for good. More info in the MySQL glossary of the manual. Sep 19, 2012 at 1:19
  • Sure, thanks. Will take a look into it. :) But still am confused. Kinda got it now! :) Sep 19, 2012 at 2:39
  • 2
    This needs an order by.
    – philipxy
    Dec 5, 2016 at 5:50
13

LIMIT limit OFFSET offset will work.

But you need a stable ORDER BY clause, or the values may be ordered differently for the next call (after any write on the table for instance).

SELECT *
FROM   msgtable
WHERE  cdate = '2012-07-18'
ORDER  BY msgtable_id  -- or whatever is stable 
LIMIT  10
OFFSET 50;  -- to skip to page 6

Use standard-conforming date style (ISO 8601 in my example), which works irregardless of your locale settings.

Paging will still shift if involved rows are inserted or deleted or changed in relevant columns. It has to.

To avoid that shift or for better performance with big tables use smarter paging strategies:

2
  • 1
    One cannot emphasize enough just how important having that ORDER BY clause is in order to conform to the standard and to ensure the query generates predictable output. Sep 19, 2012 at 19:58
  • who keeps track of the offset ? db engine ? Dec 6, 2021 at 11:05
2
SET @rownum = 0; 
SELECT sub.*, sub.rank as Rank
FROM
(
   SELECT *,  (@rownum := @rownum + 1) as rank
   FROM msgtable 
   WHERE cdate = '18/07/2012'
) sub
WHERE rank BETWEEN ((@PageNum - 1) * @PageSize + 1)
  AND (@PageNum * @PageSize)

Every time you pass the parameters @PageNum and the @PageSize to get the specific page you want. For exmple the first 10 rows would be @PageNum = 1 and @PageSize = 10

2
<html>
<head>
    <title>Pagination</title>
</head>
<body>
<?php 

    $conn = mysqli_connect('localhost','root','','northwind');
    $data_per_page = 10;
    $select = "SELECT * FROM `customers`";  
    $select_run = mysqli_query($conn, $select);
    $records = mysqli_num_rows($select_run);
    // while ($result = mysqli_fetch_array($select_run)) {      
    //     echo $result['CompanyName'] . '<br>';        
    // }
    // $records;
    echo "<br>";
    $no_of_page = ceil($records / $data_per_page);
    if(!isset($_GET['page'])){
        $page = 1;
    }else{
        $page = $_GET['page'];
    }
    $page_limit_data = ($page - 1) * 10;
    $select = "SELECT * FROM customers LIMIT " . $page_limit_data . ',' . $data_per_page ;
    $select_run = mysqli_query($conn, $select);
    while ($row_select = mysqli_fetch_array($select_run)){
        echo $row_select['CompanyName'] . '<br>' ;
    }
    for($page=1; $page<= $no_of_page; $page++){ 
        echo "<a href='pagination.php?page=$page'> $page" . ', ';   
    }
?>
<br>
<h1> Testing Limit Functions Here  </h1>
<?php 
$limit = "SELECT CompanyName From customers LIMIT 10 OFFSET 5";
$limit_run = mysqli_query($conn , $limit);
while($limit_result = mysqli_fetch_array($limit_run)){
    echo $limit_result['CompanyName'] . '<br>';
}
?>
</body>
</html>
2
  • This page name is pagination.php
    – Raj
    Jul 11, 2018 at 10:30
  • While this code may answer the question, providing information on how and why it solves the problem improves its long-term value.
    – L_J
    Jul 11, 2018 at 10:48
1

for first 10 rows...

SELECT * FROM msgtable WHERE cdate='18/07/2012' LIMIT 0,10

for next 10 rows

SELECT * FROM msgtable WHERE cdate='18/07/2012' LIMIT 10,10
0

You can use postgresql Cursors

BEGIN;
DECLARE C CURSOR FOR where * FROM msgtable where cdate='18/07/2012';

Then use

FETCH 10 FROM C;

to fetch 10 rows.

Finnish with

COMMIT;

to close the cursor.

But if you need to make a query in different processes, LIMIT and OFFSET as suggested by @Praveen Kumar is better

0

Ok. So I think you just need to implement Pagination.

$perPage = 10;

$pageNo = $_GET['page'];

Now find total rows in database.

$totalRows = Get By applying sql query;

$pages = ceil($totalRows/$perPage);    

$offset = ($pageNo - 1) * $perPage + 1

$sql = "SELECT * FROM msgtable WHERE cdate='18/07/2012' LIMIT ".$offset." ,".$perPage
1
  • This is insecure and could be used for sql injection purposes. Please don't use this.
    – ccjjmartin
    Oct 11, 2017 at 15:44

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