3

I have some data in a table like so:

user

user_id  name
1        John
2        William
3        cindy
4        Julian
5        Monique

books out

user_id  book_id
1        1
2        3
3        5
5        10

vinyl out

user_id  vinyl_id
1        6
2        7
3        8
4        9

I want a single SELECT statement that would produce this output:

user_id  item_out
1        1 
1        6
2        3
2        7
3        5     
3        8 
4        9
5        10

So, in order of user_id and book_id/vinyl_id. Is this possible?

4
  • You could LEFT JOIN both tables and check with IFNULL() what id to display. Keep one thing in mind, if the same id is in both tables, you won;t see if it is vinyl or a book.
    – Johan
    Apr 15, 2016 at 8:36
  • if i were you i would restructure the database while you still can. make one table product out and add a enum column for type. The structure you're using now seems flawed, especially because they seem to be sharing the same id (they have to be unique)
    – Jester
    Apr 15, 2016 at 8:55
  • @Jester This example isn't my real production problem, only a simplified example. Restructuring the database isn't that easy and more complex in my real database. But you are right. I should think about how to restructure this component.
    – ma9ma
    Apr 19, 2016 at 8:45
  • @johan Both tables doe have the same id. For now I solved this by adding an extra column with a default value for books and vinyl in the select statement. Long term solution would be to restructure the database.
    – ma9ma
    Apr 19, 2016 at 8:50

2 Answers 2

2

You have to UNION ALL results from two separate queries:

SELECT u.user_id, book_id AS item_out
FROM user AS u
INNER JOIN books_out AS b ON u.user_id = b.user_id

UNION ALL

SELECT u.user_id, vinyl_id AS item_out
FROM user AS u
INNER JOIN vinyl_out AS v ON u.user_id = v.user_id
ORDER BY user_id, item_out

The first query returns results from books_out table, whereas the second returns results from vinyl_out table.

Note: ORDER BY clause is applied to the result set that is produced by the UNION ALL operation.

Demo here

1
  • Thanks, works like a charm. First time ever I (need to) use UNION ALL.
    – ma9ma
    Apr 15, 2016 at 10:50
0

Try This Please comment if any error.

select u.user_id,b.book_id as item_out from user u left join 
 books_out b on u.user_id = b.user_id 
 UNION ALL
 select u.user_id,v.vinyl_id as item_out from user u left join 
 vinyl_out v on u.user_id = v.user_id 
 order by user_id;

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