1

I have these 3 tables:

Bill:

idBill

Products:

idProduct
price

BillProducts (that connects the tables above):

idBill
idProduct
quantity

Now let's say I wish to get the total price of a certain bill identified by its ID

I would need to multiply the columns of Products.Price by BillProducts.quantity, get its result and sum all the others products in that idBill

Can you guys help me writing that query?

2
  • When you say sum all the other products in that billId do you mean the quantity from the Billsproducts table? Jun 16, 2018 at 21:55
  • @Ian-Fogelman Sorry that I wasn't explicit. I want to multiply Products.Price by BillProducts.quantity for each row where idBill matches the id I want, and sum all the result of that multiplication. In other words, when a client purchases products, they get a bill with all the products associated (in BillProducts), and I intent to know the total price of that bill
    – xickoh
    Jun 16, 2018 at 22:08

2 Answers 2

3
SELECT SUM(QUANTxPRICE) AS SUMED, IDBILL FROM (
SELECT (A.QUANTITY * B.PRICE) AS QUANTxPRICE,a.IDBILL
FROM BILLPRODUCTS AS A
JOIN PRODUCTS AS B ON 
A.IDPRODUCT = B.IDPRODUCT
JOIN BILL AS C
ON A.IDBILL = C.IDBILL
) AS X
GROUP BY IDBILL

enter image description here

6
  • That is very appreciated mate, is there any way to get the results in a single query (without creating temporary tables?) If so, I'd be very glad
    – xickoh
    Jun 16, 2018 at 22:16
  • Sorry please see edit i think that will work for you temps only for example purpose. Jun 16, 2018 at 22:17
  • Thank you, hope you're aware you've helped me doing a class :)
    – xickoh
    Jun 16, 2018 at 22:25
  • @xickoh, if you want to use stackoverflow to cheat in your schoolwork, that's your problem and your responsibility. We are not the school police. If you bring a good question to the site (one that is well expressed and will be useful to future users), people will answer it. But you will get busted at school, now or later.
    – alexis
    Jun 17, 2018 at 7:04
  • 1
    Glad to hear that, I guess I misinterpreted what you wrote, sorry. All the more reason not to try to be the school police...
    – alexis
    Jun 17, 2018 at 19:14
1

You would do:

select sum(p.price * bp.product)
from billproducts bp join
     products p
     on bp.idproduct = p.idproduct
where idbill = <idbill>;

You can get this for all bills using group by:

select idbill, sum(p.price * bp.product)
from billproducts bp join
     products p
     on bp.idproduct = p.idproduct
group by idbill;

Notes:

  • You do not need to join the bills table. All the information you need is in the other two tables.
  • You do not need a subquery.
  • When you define table aliases, they should be abbreviations for the table names, so the query is easier to follow.
2
  • That's very helpful friend, from those queries you wrote I managed to get the rest of my tasks done :)
    – xickoh
    Jun 17, 2018 at 19:59
  • @xickoh . . . This is a much simpler answer to the question that you asked. Jun 17, 2018 at 23:34

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