4

I Need to select Data from Tables of a specific user at certain days. I am not exactly sure what is wrong with my code.

Here is my code:

select k.info, z.mes_user, z.mes_date, m.val_user, m.val_date
from table_K k
left join table_M m on k.key1 = m.key1
left join table_Z z on m.key1 = z.key1 and m.key2 = z.key2
where (m.val_user like '%Username%' or z.mes_user like '%User-ID%') and
(
z.mes_date like '%18.04.17%' or
z.mes_date like '%20.04.17%' or
m.val_date like '%18.04.17%' or
m.val_date like '%20.04.17%');

The mistake is propably in the where clause.

'Username' and 'User-ID' are just placeholders for the code. The data type of mes_date and val_date are date.

9
  • create a variable of Username,User_id and date and used '=' operator Sep 14, 2017 at 7:02
  • When LEFT JOIN, move the right side table conditions from WHERE to ON to get true LEFT JOIN result. (As it is now you get regular INNER JOIN result.)
    – jarlh
    Sep 14, 2017 at 7:04
  • 1
    What is data type of table_M.mes_date and table_Z.val_date columns?
    – Serg
    Sep 14, 2017 at 7:04
  • We don't know what's wrong either, because you have not shared that information. What output do you get, what do you get, do you have sample data? Sep 14, 2017 at 7:05
  • Don't store dates/timestamps in char/varchar columns. Use proper data types!
    – jarlh
    Sep 14, 2017 at 7:05

3 Answers 3

3

If the 'mes_date' column's type is DATE, you can do the following.

First see how the format of the date is stored in the database table. You can do it by

SELECT TO_CHAR(mes_date) FROM table_Z;

Then you can create your LIKE condition based on the format.

SELECT k.info, z.mes_user, z.mes_date, m.val_user, m.val_date
FROM table_K k
LEFT JOIN table_M m ON k.key1 = m.key1
LEFT JOIN table_Z z ON m.key1 = z.key1 AND m.key2 = z.key2
WHERE (m.val_user LIKE '%Username%' OR z.mes_user LIKE '%User-ID%') AND
(
z.TO_CHAR(mes_date) LIKE '%your_format%' OR
z.TO_CHAR(mes_date) LIKE '%your_format%' OR
z.TO_CHAR(mes_date) LIKE '%your_format%' OR
z.TO_CHAR(mes_date) LIKE '%your_format%');
3
  • thank you but I already used the right date format. I just get way too many datasets. i get data sets from all users in the database at the two given dates. but i only want the data sets from the one user I insert into %Username% and %User-ID%.
    – wenzel267
    Sep 14, 2017 at 7:31
  • Cool.Glad you sorted it out :) Sep 14, 2017 at 7:40
  • TO_CHAR( date_value ) uses the NLS_DATE_FORMAT session parameter as the default format model; this is a per-user session setting and should NOT be relied on to be consistent and unchanging (especially in international organisations where users in different territories will have different default date formats). Without specifying a format mask the query will break as soon as one user changes their date format and you will have a hard time debugging it as the query will not have changed.
    – MT0
    Sep 14, 2017 at 8:56
1

The data type of mes_date and val_date are date.

Using z.mes_date like '%18.04.17%' is performing a string comparison on the date and effectively the same as:

TO_CHAR(
  z.mes_date,
  ( SELECT value FROM NLS_SESSION_PARAMETERS WHERE parameter = 'NLS_DATE_FORMAT' )
) like '%18.04.17%'

The NLS_DATE_FORMAT session parameter is a per-user setting and can be changed by each user. Do NOT rely on it to be consistent and unchanging - there lies the road to some very hard to debug bugs where one user changes a setting and suddenly your query breaks without the query changing.

A better solution is:

TRUNC( z.mes_date ) IN ( DATE '2017-04-18', DATE '2017-04-20' )

But that will prevent you using an index on z.mes_date and would require a function-based index on TRUNC( z.mes_date ).

You could also use:

   ( z.mes_date >= DATE '2017-04-18' AND z.mes_date < DATE '2017-04-18' + 1 )
OR ( z.mes_date >= DATE '2017-04-20' AND z.mes_date < DATE '2017-04-20' + 1 )

Which would allow the use of indexes on mes_date.

0

Looks like you need ( assuming those columns are round dates)

select k.info, z.mes_user, z.mes_date, m.val_user, m.val_date
from table_K k
left join table_M m on k.key1 = m.key1 and m.val_user like '%Username%'
left join table_Z z on m.key1 = z.key1 and m.key2 = z.key2
   and z.mes_user like '%User-ID%' 
   and (z.mes_date in (TO_DATE('18.04.17','dd.mm.yy'), TO_DATE('20.04.17','dd.mm.yy')) 
     or z.val_date in (TO_DATE('18.04.17','dd.mm.yy'), TO_DATE('20.04.17','dd.mm.yy')));
2
  • This will not work if mes_date is 2017-04-18T01:23:45.
    – MT0
    Sep 14, 2017 at 8:50
  • @MT0 definetly. Added the assumption. Your answer gives the clear perspective for the case the assumption will not hold.
    – Serg
    Sep 14, 2017 at 9:23

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