17

I have two columns, source and destination in table Hyperlink, to store the source and destination of hyperlinks.

source | destination 
-------------------- 
  a    |  b 
  b    |  c 
  c    |  d 
  c    |  b 

There are two hyperlinks involving both b and c. The difference between the two hyperlinks is the direction of the hyperlink. However, my objective is to retrieve unique hyperlinks, no matter which direction. So for hyperlinks such as from b to c and from c to b, I just want to select one of them. Any one would do.

So my results should look like this:

source | destination 
-------------------- 
  a    |  b 
  b    |  c 
  c    |  d 

So far I am able to implement this in Java, with some processing before I execute SQL statements using JDBC. However, this is going to be very tedious when the table becomes very large.

I wonder if there is anyway I can do this in SQL instead.

I tried SELECT DISTINCT source,destination FROM Hyperlink but it returns me the unique permutations. I need the unique combinations.

Thanks!

2
  • 2
    If you post code, XML or data samples, PLEASE highlight those lines in the text editor and click on the "code samples" button ( { } ) on the editor toolbar to nicely format and syntax highlight it! Then you don't need any of the messy <br> and &nbsp; tags, either!
    – marc_s
    Jul 29, 2012 at 8:17
  • 2
    great, thanks for the tip! it was hard trying to use the messy tags.
    – paperclip
    Jul 29, 2012 at 8:20

4 Answers 4

4

This is easily achievable with the least() and greatest() operator, but as MySQL doesn't support them you need to use a CASE construct to get the smaller/greater one. With two columns this is ok, but this solution gets pretty messy once more columns are involved

select distinct 
          case 
            when source < destination then source 
            else destination 
          end as source,
          case 
            when source > destination then source 
            else destination 
          end as destination
from hyperlinks
1
  • This one works for me. I only work with two columns so this solution is good enough. Thanks!
    – paperclip
    Jul 29, 2012 at 11:25
2

Try the following query:

SELECT DISTINCT source, destination FROM hyperlink
MINUS 
SELECT destination, source FROM hyperlinks WHERE source < destination;

This works for Oracle . If you're using PostgreSQL, DB2 or TSQL, use the EXCEPT keyword instead of MINUS.

EDIT: There's no equivalent of these keywords in MySQL. You'll have to work around it by selecting the values as suggested by Jim Riordan. I'm not going to delete my answer in case if anyone needs to do it in any of the other four major DBMS.

2
  • I'm using MySQL, but thanks for your answer. If not mistaken, in MySQL it should be UNION instead of MINUS. Thanks again!
    – paperclip
    Jul 29, 2012 at 8:48
  • @paperclip as far as I know, a UNION combines rows from tables and removes duplicates. This is different. MINUS is a set operation that removes one row from a set for every identical row in another set. (A, B,C) UNION (C,D) gives (A, B, C, D). But (A, B, C) MINUS (C, D) returns (A, B). You can't just replace one with the other, you'd have to alter the SELECT statements significantly. Jul 29, 2012 at 8:58
1

You can use the union of two separate join queries like so:

SELECT
lhs.source, lhs.destination
FROM Hyperlink lhs
LEFT OUTER JOIN Hyperlink rhs
ON rhs.source = lhs.destination
WHERE rhs.source IS NULL
UNION
SELECT
lhs.source, lhs.destination
FROM Hyperlink lhs
JOIN Hyperlink rhs
ON rhs.source = lhs.destination
WHERE rhs.destination <> lhs.source
ORDER BY source;

The first query gets the links that don't have the source as the destination, the second gets the matches that have source as the destination, but different opposites. It's probably not the fastest implementation but ensuring you have indexes on the source and destination columns will help it along, whether it will be performant for you depends how big the Hyperlink table is or is likely to get.

0

I tried this query and it worked for me

SELECT table1.Source, table1.Destination FROM dbo.hyperlinks table1 WHERE NOT EXISTS
(SELECT * FROM hyperlinks table2 WHERE table1.Source = table2.Destination AND table2.Source = table1.Destination)

UNION 

SELECT TOP 1 table1.Source, table1.Destination FROM hyperlinks table1 WHERE 
  (SELECT COUNT(*) FROM hyperlinks table2 WHERE table1.Source = table2.Destination AND  table2.Source = table1.Destination) > 0
2
  • I don't understand your statement. Where does table2 come from?
    – paperclip
    Jul 29, 2012 at 8:57
  • this is an alias name for hyperlink table! because I used hyperlink table more than once in my query, I have to use an alias name for it. I used test1 and test2. you can use any name you want to! Jul 29, 2012 at 9:12

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