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I have read up on excluding results in PHP and mySQL but I can't seem to figure out the correct syntax for the search code I am using.

In all of my other result tables that simply pull information from the database without having to use a search form, excluding userlevels has been easily achieved by simply including the following after the "WHERE" statement:

WHERE `userlevel` !='9' AND `userlevel` !='1' AND `userlevel` !='4' AND `userlevel` !='5' AND `userlevel` !='6'

Now, I'm using a search code that uses "OR" instead of "AND" and "LIKE" with the terms. It looks like this:

//Set the MySQL query
if ($search == NULL or $search == '%'){
} else {
for ($i=0; $i<count($keywords); $i++) {
$query = "SELECT * FROM sound_users " .
"WHERE genre LIKE '%".$keywords[$i]."%'".
" OR genre2 LIKE '%".$keywords[$i]."%'" .
" OR genre3 LIKE '%".$keywords[$i]."%'" .
" OR bandname LIKE '%".$keywords[$i]."%'" .
" ORDER BY genre";

}

I saw in some other forums that "NOT IN (SELECT *)...." is being used to exclude data but it seems like every code uses punctuation differently - has a different syntax - so I'm not so sure how to exclude specific values with this search code.

I have tried simple angles like:

" OR userlevel !='5'" .
" OR userlevel !='9'" .

and that only did funky things to the search results which wound up including both of those userlevels at the same time in two different tables stacked on top of eachother. So I changed the "OR" to "AND" - like it is in my other code and that didn't work either.

At that point, I tried to add the "NOT IN" and "NOT EXISTS" examples I found but any way I do it, always seems to come back with san error telling me to check the syntax.

I'm wondering if it's even possible to exclude specific values from search results using "OR" or if exclusion only works for basic code simply calling values from the database to display and not necessarily using a search form.

1 Answer 1

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Parentheses are your friend!

WHERE 
  (X LIKE '%X%' OR Y LIKE '%Y%' OR Z LIKE '%Z%')
  AND
  (X NOT LIKE '%XX%' OR Y<>'abc' OR LENGTH(Z)<5 OR A<>7)

BTW: The usual notation for unequality in SQL is <>, not !=

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  • Thanks so much! I was really struggling with that one! I saw some brackets and such being used in some examples but must have been putting them in all the wrong spots. Got it working now with your help! Really appreciate it! I'm constantly learning.
    – David
    Mar 15, 2014 at 4:51

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