1

My eventual goal is to generate tag links for blog posts, the tags relating to the post.

Currently my query has a GROUP_CONCAT which grabs relating tags and the returning tags column value is something like:

'Brooklyn, Manhattan, New York'

from

SELECT 
post.id, 
post.name, 
GROUP_CONCAT( tags.name order by tags.name ) AS tags 
FROM post 
LEFT JOIN tags_items
  ON post.id = tags_items.post
LEFT JOIN tags
  ON tags_items.tag = tags.id

With this string, in my server-side code I'm splitting it up by the comma and looping through to generate tags. However, now I need to make these links and I need to know the respective id of each of the tags in order to generate a link such as <a href="?tag=1">New York</a>. My HTML structure will be as such:

<div class=post>
  <h2>Rakim Allah!</h2>
  <div class=tags>
    <a href="/tags/1">Brooklyn</a>
    <a href="/tags/2">Manhattan</a>
    <a href="/tags/3">New York</a>
  </div>
</div>

tags table:

id    name
1     Brooklyn
2     Manhattan

tags_items table ( no pk ):

post  tag
1     1
4
  • Why are you using group_concat instead of just returning multiple rows with name and Id as columns?
    – Donnie
    Dec 2, 2009 at 21:48
  • @Donnie: I imagine it's because meder wanted to get everything related to the blog post in a single query. I agree - it's a waste to create a comma delimited string when you know you're going to break it out.
    – OMG Ponies
    Dec 2, 2009 at 21:50
  • Sorry guys, I updated the query a bit so you can see it Dec 2, 2009 at 21:52
  • @meder - I'd just lose the group_concat and iterate through the result set looking for changes in the group_by fields to decide when I needed to start a new group. It's easier than what you're doing, and no slower.
    – Donnie
    Dec 2, 2009 at 21:55

1 Answer 1

1

You could try adding the ID to each item in the group list w/ a different delimiter:

SELECT post.id, post.name, 
GROUP_CONCAT( CONCAT(tags.id, ';', tags.name) order by tags.name ) AS tags 
FROM post 
LEFT JOIN tags 
          ON post.id = tags.post_id;

Now you'd just have to do an additional split on semi-colons to get the id and name.

1
  • Yeah I thought of doing this but wasn't sure of the syntax, I'll try this out. Dec 2, 2009 at 22:01

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