2

Here is my table:

 id | title    | lang
----+----------+------
 1  | Moscow   | en
 1  | Москва   | ru
 2  | Helsinki | en 
 2  | Хельсинки| ru

I would like to efficiently get the ru title by en title.

At the moment, I get the id of the entry first and then make another query by hand.

Any other, more elegant, solutions?

2
  • 2
    Does not clear your question actually what you want, english title?
    – Sadikhasan
    Jul 27, 2015 at 8:42
  • Your question is unclear. Could you please show us what you have tried thus far?
    – PKirby
    Jul 27, 2015 at 8:44

3 Answers 3

4

A SELF JOIN might be of help and is usually a preferable solution to lots of nested queries, if not for performance reasons (see: Join vs. sub-query, Rewriting Subqueries as Joins) certainly for readability.

In your case try:

SELECT movies_ru.title 
 FROM movies AS movies_ru 
 JOIN movies AS movies_en 
 ON movies_ru.id = movies_en.id
 WHERE movies_ru.lang = "ru"
 AND movies_en.lang = "en"
 AND movies_en.title = "The English Title"
2
  • 2
    After reading "Join vs sub-query" I have to agree... @DainiusVaičiulis , are you hearing us?
    – Siguza
    Jul 27, 2015 at 11:03
  • @Siguza nota bene: I seem to understand that this is not an universal rule; according to benchmarks found on some Internet outlets, under Oracle, for example, there seems to be little or no penalty for nested SELECTs over self JOINs. However, I think it's safe to take the MySQL reference manual at face value when it says "A LEFT [OUTER] JOIN can be faster than an equivalent subquery because the server might be able to optimize it better" Jul 27, 2015 at 11:22
1

Edit: It turns out Tobia Tesan's answer is usually better practice.


Use a subselect:

SELECT `title` FROM `table` WHERE `lang` = 'ru' AND `id` = (SELECT `id` FROM `table` WHERE `lang` = 'en' AND `title` = 'Moscow')
-1

you can do this whit this simple query:-

SELECT title FROM table 
WHERE lang = 'ru'
 AND
 id = (SELECT id FROM table WHERE lang = 'en' AND title = 'Moscow')
1
  • Except table is a keyword, and needs to be escaped, or you'll hit a syntax error.
    – Siguza
    Jul 27, 2015 at 10:26

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