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I got a table with over 12 columns. This is the mysql query used to retrive the latest 7 records

SELECT * FROM data WHERE user_id IN(12,10,7,1) HAVING continent IN('Europe','America','Australia') AND NOT MATCH(weather) AGAINST('+"[blues]"' IN BOOLEAN MODE) || continent = 'Asia' AND MATCH(weather) AGAINST('+"[purples]"' IN BOOLEAN MODE) ORDER BY tb_id DESC LIMIT 7

Total rows are more than 5 million and user_id is an indexed column with tb_id being the PRIMARY KEY. When i use the EXPLAIN in front of SELECT. MySQL tells that it will read over 400 thousand records from a total of 5 million.

So should I index continent column or it won't help in this case?

Here is the EXPLAIN result

id = 1; select_type = SIMPLE; table = data; possible_keys = user_id; key = user_id; ref = NULL; rows = 582; Extra = Using where, Using filesort

3
  • Why is this in the HAVING clause?
    – Strawberry
    Feb 6, 2013 at 10:09
  • Is the HAVING clause a remainder of a GROUP BY clause that was later removed? Is || intended to be a boolean OR or a string concatenation? Is continent indexed? And you forgot to post the explain plan. Feb 6, 2013 at 10:10
  • continent is not indexed. Thats what i want to know. And HAVING is an extension to GROUP BY Feb 6, 2013 at 10:12

1 Answer 1

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First of all, your query is probably wrong. When you use OR mixed with AND in where or having clause or anywhere, you should use parantheses.

Second, using HAVING in your case doesn't make sense and the optimizer will most likely convert it to a WHERE clause.

The difference between the two is, that WHERE is applied when determining which rows to select. HAVING is applied on the result set. So, if the optimizer wouldn't do a good job, you would first get (almost) all rows, then filter those. When you put it all in the WHERE clause, you get only the relevant rows. HAVING (almost) only makes sense when you are using GROUP BY.

So, you better write your query this way:

SELECT * FROM data 
WHERE user_id IN(12,10,7,1) AND
(
(
continent IN('Europe','America','Australia') 
AND NOT MATCH(weather) AGAINST('+"[blues]"' IN BOOLEAN MODE) 
)
OR 
(
continent = 'Asia' 
AND MATCH(weather) AGAINST('+"[purples]"' IN BOOLEAN MODE) 
)
)
ORDER BY tb_id DESC LIMIT 7

To answer your question about the index, post the result of the explain and the create statements of your table data.

5
  • Thanks @tomboom. Here is the result of explain id = 1 select_type = SIMPLE table = data possible_keys = user_id key = user_id ref = NULL rows = 582 Extra = Using where, Using filesort Feb 6, 2013 at 10:20
  • Also for better readability you can end the statement with \G instead of ;. Then the columns become rows and it's easier to post.
    – fancyPants
    Feb 6, 2013 at 10:22
  • @RayZ Also don't forget to do SHOW CREATE TABLE data and post the result, please.
    – fancyPants
    Feb 6, 2013 at 10:23
  • Your explain plan says, that the index on user_id is already used. what you can try (apart from adding another index on continent) is a compound index over two columns (user_id, continent).
    – fancyPants
    Feb 6, 2013 at 10:44
  • On localhost, i am able to fetch 582 rows in undex 20 milliseconds. So i don't believe that adding an index on continent would help. And thanks again @tomboom. U really hepled me eliminate HAVING from my query. Feb 6, 2013 at 10:48

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