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Hi all,

I was wondering if there was a way to get the number of results from a MySQL query, and at the same time limit the results.

The way pagination works (as I understand it), first I do something like

query = SELECT COUNT(*) FROM `table` WHERE `some_condition`

After I get the num_rows(query), I have the number of results. But then to actually limit my results, I have to do a second query like:

query2 = SELECT COUNT(*) FROM `table` WHERE `some_condition` LIMIT 0, 10

My question: Is there anyway to both retrieve the total number of results that would be given, AND limit the results returned in a single query? Or any more efficient way of doing this. Thanks!

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3 Answers

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No, that's how many applications that want to paginate have to do it. It's reliable and bullet-proof, albeit it makes the query twice. But you can cache the count for a few seconds and that will help a lot.

The other way is to use SQL_CALC_FOUND_ROWS clause and then call SELECT FOUND_ROWS(). apart from the fact you have to put the FOUND_ROWS() call afterwards, there is a problem with this: There is a bug in MySQL that this tickles that affects ORDER BY queries making it much slower on large tables than the naive approach of two queries.

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Excellent, thanks for your help! – Jasie May 4 at 2:49
It's not quite race-condition proof, however, unless you do the two queries within a transaction. This generally isn't a problem, though. – Sharkey May 4 at 3:23
By "reliable" I meant the SQL itself is always going to return the result you want, and by "bullet-proof" I meant that there are no MySQL bugs hampering what SQL you can use. Unlike using SQL_CALC_FOUND_ROWS with ORDER BY and LIMIT, according to the bug I mentioned. – staticsan May 4 at 4:30
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query = SELECT col, col2, (SELECT COUNT(*) FROM `table`) AS total FROM `table` WHERE `some_condition` LIMIT 0, 10
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In most situations it is much faster and less resource intensive to do it in two separate queries than to do it in one, even though that seems counter-intuitive.

If you use SQL_CALC_FOUND_ROWS, then for large tables it makes your query much slower, significantly slower even than executing two queries, the first with a COUNT(*) and the second with a LIMIT. The reason for this is that SQL_CALC_FOUND_ROWS causes the LIMIT clause to be applied after fetching the rows instead of before, so it fetches the entire row for all possible results before applying the limits. This can't be satisfied by an index because it actually fetches the data.

If you take the two queries approach, the first one only fetching COUNT(*) and not actually fetching and actual data, this can be satisfied much more quickly because it can usually use indexes and doesn't have to fetch the actual row data for every row it looks at. Then, the second query only needs to look at the first $offset+$limit rows and then return.

This post from the MySQL performance blog explains this further.

For more information on optimising pagination, check this post and this post.

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