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I don't know SQL. I read some guides and pieced together this query:

SELECT DISTINCT K.barcode 
FROM wp_weblib_keywords K, wp_weblib_collection C 
WHERE keyword LIKE Teen 
  AND keyword LIKE 7-12 && K.barcode = C.barcode 
ORDER BY C.barcode ASC

I'm trying to find every book that has both keyword "Teen" AND "7-12" (I need the book to have both keywords, not just one or the other). This is how I initialized each table:

CREATE TABLE weblib_keywords 
(
     keyword VARCHAR(64) NOT NULL,
     barcode varchar(16) not null check (barcode <> ''),
     KEY (keyword) 
) CHARACTER SET utf8;

CREATE TABLE weblib_collection 
(
     barcode varchar(16) not null unique check (barcode <> ''),
     title varchar(128) not null check (title <> ''),
     author varchar(64) not null check (author <> ''),
     PRIMARY KEY (barcode),
     KEY (title),
     KEY (author)
) CHARACTER SET utf8;

I think the problem is I'm not telling SQL which table to search in, but I'm not sure how to write that. Thanks for any help!

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  • 1
    Sample data and desired results would help. Jul 11, 2020 at 16:50

3 Answers 3

2

Try the below - with the like operator you need to wildcard character '%'

SELECT DISTINCT K.barcode FROM wp_weblib_keywords K inner join wp_weblib_collection C
on K.barcode = C.barcode
WHERE keyword LIKE '%Teen%' OR keyword LIKE '%7-12%' 
order by C.barcode 
2
  • That worked, but when I change the OR to AND, it still has no results. I already verified that I have some books with keyword Teen and 7-12
    – Joe C.
    Jul 11, 2020 at 16:50
  • for the single column, using different condition with AND will not show you any result, you need OR condition @JasonC.
    – Fahmi
    Jul 11, 2020 at 16:55
1

You can try UNION based on your data volume.

SELECT K.barcode FROM wp_weblib_keywords K 
inner join wp_weblib_collection C
on K.barcode = C.barcode
WHERE keyword LIKE '%Teen%' 
UNION
SELECT K.barcode FROM wp_weblib_keywords K 
inner join wp_weblib_collection C
on K.barcode = C.barcode
WHERE keyword LIKE '%7-12%' 

Why UNION ?

Edit:

If you only need both of them try below. For the same line if you try LIKE and AND together it will give you no result. You should consider joining the same table again with different alias and check your constraints seperately.

SELECT c.barcode FROM wp_weblib_keywords K1 
inner join wp_weblib_collection C
on K1.barcode = C.barcode
inner join wp_weblib_keywords K2 
on K2.barcode = C.barcode
WHERE k1.keyword LIKE '%Teen%' and k2.keyword LIKE '%7-12%' 
group by c.barcode 
2
  • Will this get me "Teen" AND "7-12" or "Teen" OR "7-12"? I need the first one
    – Joe C.
    Jul 11, 2020 at 16:56
  • You will get only 'Teen' plus only '7-12' with using this. If there are records which contain both 'Teen' and '7-12' you will get those record both ways of union (below and above) but their barcode will be singularize. @JasonC. Jul 11, 2020 at 17:05
1

If the semantics of the wp_weblib_keywords_table is to include a single keyword in each row, then this query will never return results (apart from formatting issues.)

The reason is that the query looks at each row in the wp_weblib_keywords table and tries to find a single row where the keyword is two separate values. Well, a single row in a table will never have a column that equals two separate values.

Try this:

SELECT DISTINCT C.barcode 
FROM wp_weblib_collection C
INNER JOIN join wp_weblib_keywords K1 on C.barcode = K1.barcode 
INNER JOIN wp_weblib_keywords K2 on c.barcode = K2.barcode
WHERE k1.keyword = 'Teen' AND k2.keyword = '7-12' 
ORDER BY C.barcode 

That query will return rows if there is one record with keyword 'Teen' and another record with keyword = '7-12'

4
  • 1
    This seems like the right idea, and I will try it, but where did you define K? Other than that, it seems good.
    – Joe C.
    Jul 11, 2020 at 17:09
  • Sorry, I changed K to C. Please try it now.
    – crosen9999
    Jul 11, 2020 at 17:11
  • This will not give the right result because you are looking keyword column using = operator. You should use LIKE instead.@crosen9999 Jul 11, 2020 at 17:19
  • If the semantics of the wp_weblib_keywords table are to have one keyword per row, then = is the correct operator @ismetguzelgun
    – crosen9999
    Jul 11, 2020 at 17:42

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