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I am trying to create a view in Oracle to show all rooms available in the hotel that are not booked out.

If they are booked out there will be a record in RoomBasket. So I am trying to select all rooms not in RoomBasket between the checkin and checkout dates (RoomBasket.datein, RoomBasket.dateout)

But the query kept returning 0 results when I used inner joins and outer (left/right) joins, I think it's because it is not joined on to a table of dates so it will have 0 results. So now I am trying to do a Union to the Room table which has a record of all rooms, as I think that would select all Rooms and then negate the ones which are booked out?

I can't get my syntax correct and I played around with loads of forms of this query:

CREATE VIEW availability AS
    (SELECT * FROM RoomBasket rb
        WHERE TO_DATE(SYSDATE, 'yyyymmdd') 
        NOT BETWEEN TO_DATE(rb.datein, 'yyyymmdd') AND TO_DATE(rb.dateout, 'yyyymmdd')
        UNION (SELECT r.id room, rt.type type, rt.price price FROM Room r, RoomType rt)
    );

But if it works I get 0 results and if it doesn't work I get syntax errors. At the moment the error is:

query block has incorrect number of result columns

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  • Don't use SELECT * in the first query, actually list the columns you need. A UNION requires the same # of columns in all queries.
    – Taryn
    Mar 31, 2015 at 17:22

3 Answers 3

3

You have no predicate on your join of Room to RoomType, so you get a cross join. That is unlikely to be what you want.

Furthermore, your union looks like it's trying to add unrelated data to the room data. Your description of the problem suggests that you want to use the RoomBasket data to filter the other data instead -- that requires a join or a subquery.

Something more along these lines would do what you want:

CREATE VIEW availability AS (
  SELECT r.id room, rt.type type, rt.price price
  FROM
    Room r
    INNER JOIN RoomType rt
      ON rt.id = r.type
    LEFT JOIN RoomBasket rb
      ON rb.room = r.id
        AND TO_DATE(SYSDATE, 'yyyymmdd') BETWEEN TO_DATE(rb.datein, 'yyyymmdd')
          AND TO_DATE(rb.dateout, 'yyyymmdd')
  WHERE rb.room IS NULL
);

The WHERE predicate has the effect of selecting those rows of the left table (Room JOIN RoomType) which are not matched by any row of the right table (RoomBasket).

3

Your first query is returning a different number of columns than your second query, thus they cannot be unioned. Specify the columns for the first query explicitly instead of using SELECT *.

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I got it working correctly like this:

CREATE VIEW availability AS
            (SELECT 
                r.id room, 
                rt.type type, 
                rt.price price 
                FROM Room r 
                INNER JOIN RoomType rt ON r.type = rt.id
                INNER JOIN RoomBasket rb ON r.id = rb.room
                WHERE TO_DATE(SYSDATE, 'DD-Mon-YYYY') 
                    NOT BETWEEN TO_DATE(rb.datein, 'DD-Mon-YYYY') 
                            AND TO_DATE(rb.dateout, 'DD-Mon-YYYY')
            )
    ;
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  • It looks like that stands to return duplicates of rooms that have multiple corresponding RoomBasket rows outside the date range you're using. There's enough information for me to update my answer with correct column names, though. Mar 31, 2015 at 17:36
  • @JohnBollinger Yeah that one gave the incorrect result, but I got it working already like this. Edited the answer.
    – Paul
    Mar 31, 2015 at 18:08
  • No, that's worse. Not only can it still produce dupes, it also will miss rooms that have no corresponding RoomBasket row at all. Perhaps your RoomBasket data are such that it happens to produce the result you expect, but the form of the query does not ensure that it will continue to do so. Mar 31, 2015 at 18:56
  • SYSDATE is a date; you don't need to call TO_DATE on it. When you do, it is implicitly converted to a string, then explicitly converted back to a date. At best this is just unnecessary work; but it can cause wrong results if the implicit conversion format is not the same as the explicit one.
    – Dave Costa
    Apr 1, 2015 at 1:29

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