I have the following tables and data:
CREATE TABLE `jobs` (
`id` INT(10) UNSIGNED NOT NULL AUTO_INCREMENT,
`product_id` INT(10) UNSIGNED NOT NULL,
`status_id` INT(10) UNSIGNED NOT NULL,
`start_dt` TIMESTAMP NOT NULL,
`end_dt` TIMESTAMP NOT NULL,
`refreshed_dt` TIMESTAMP AS ((`start_dt` + interval ((to_days(`end_dt`) - to_days(`start_dt`)) / 2) day)) STORED,
`job_title` VARCHAR(100) NOT NULL,
PRIMARY KEY (`id`)
)
COLLATE='utf8_unicode_ci'
ENGINE=InnoDB
CREATE TABLE `job_industry` (
`job_id` INT(10) UNSIGNED NOT NULL,
`industry_id` INT(10) UNSIGNED NOT NULL,
PRIMARY KEY (`job_id`, `industry_id`),
INDEX `job_industry_industry_id_foreign` (`industry_id`),
CONSTRAINT `job_industry_industry_id_foreign` FOREIGN KEY (`industry_id`) REFERENCES `industries` (`id`),
CONSTRAINT `job_industry_job_id_foreign` FOREIGN KEY (`job_id`) REFERENCES `jobs` (`id`) ON DELETE CASCADE
)
COLLATE='utf8_unicode_ci'
ENGINE=InnoDB
INSERT INTO jobs (product_id, status_id, start_dt, end_dt, job_title)
VALUES (1, 4, "2019-07-28", "2019-08-28", "Financial Accountant"),
(1, 4, "2019-07-28", "2019-08-28", "Payroll Clerk"),
(3, 4, "2019-07-28", "2019-08-28", "Management Accountant"),
(1, 4, "2019-07-28", "2019-08-28", "Accounts Assistant"),
(1, 4, "2019-07-28", "2019-08-28", "Auditor");
INSERT INTO job_industry (job_id, industry_id)
VALUES (1, 1), (2, 1), (3, 1), (4, 1), (5, 1);
I have the following query to return a paginated results set to return all jobs which are currently live and within the accountancy industry sector:
select jobs.id,
jobs.job_title
from jobs
inner join job_industry on job_industry.job_id = jobs.id
where job_industry.industry_id in (1)
and jobs.start_dt <= now()
and jobs.end_dt >= now()
and jobs.status_id = 4
group by jobs.id
order by CASE WHEN jobs.product_id = 3 AND jobs.refreshed_dt <= now() THEN
jobs.refreshed_dt
ELSE jobs.start_dt
END desc, jobs.id desc limit 10 offset 0
The order by clause in the above query uses the product_id and refreshed_dt to give a higher ranking to records - if the product_id is 3 then it's considered a premium listing and if its reached half way through it's listing period then we use the refreshed_dt to bump it up in the list. The refreshed_dt basically is the mid point between the start_dt and end_dt. We want to list the newest listing first.
The above query give me the following result set:
id | job_title
----------------------
3 | Management Accountant <--- premium listing
5 | Auditor <--- previous
4 | Accounts Assistant <--- selected record
2 | Payroll Clerk <--- next
1 | Financial Accountant
Now if I select record id 4, how do I get the previous and next records?
I've checked the following post How to get next/previous record in MySQL? but that only works if you're ordering by id.
This is my attempt to get previous record which returns record id 5 which is correct however if there were other premium records then i feel this query would fail:
select MAX(jobs.id)
from jobs
inner join job_industry on job_industry.job_id = jobs.id
where job_industry.industry_id in (1)
and jobs.start_dt <= now()
and jobs.end_dt >= now()
and jobs.status_id = 4
and jobs.id > 4
order by CASE WHEN jobs.product_id = 3 AND jobs.refreshed_dt <= now() THEN
jobs.refreshed_dt
ELSE jobs.start_dt
END desc, jobs.id desc
And to get next record I have the following which return record id 1 which is incorrect:
select MIN(jobs.id)
from jobs
inner join job_industry on job_industry.job_id = jobs.id
where job_industry.industry_id in (1)
and jobs.start_dt <= now()
and jobs.end_dt >= now()
and jobs.status_id = 4
and jobs.id < 4
order by CASE WHEN jobs.product_id = 3 AND jobs.refreshed_dt <= now() THEN
jobs.refreshed_dt
ELSE jobs.start_dt END desc, jobs.id desc
Some help to tackle this would be appreciated. Please note I've provided a minimal reproducible example above. Also i'm using and limited to mysql version 5.7.17
$previous = Job::where('id', '<', $currentjob->id)->max('id');
Whatever application level code I'm using I need to figure out the query and then replicate it using what ever application ORM i'm using.