7

I saw many topics about this subject and I have been unsuccessful in understanding how to do it.

For example, if I have this table:

+------+-------+-------+
| id   | name  | class |
+------+-------+-------+
|    5 | test  | one   | 
|   10 | test2 | one   | 
|   12 | test5 | one   | 
|    7 | test6 | two   | 
+------+-------+-------+

and I want to show only X random rows from class "one", how can I do that?

NOTE: it's a big table, so I don't want to use ORDER BY RAND.

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3 Answers 3

21

The ORDER BY RAND() solution that most people recommend doesn't scale to large tables, as you already know.

SET @r := (SELECT FLOOR(RAND() * (SELECT COUNT(*) FROM mytable)));
SET @sql := CONCAT('SELECT * FROM mytable LIMIT 1 OFFSET ', @r);
PREPARE stmt1 FROM @sql;
EXECUTE stmt1;

I cover this and other solutions in my book, SQL Antipatterns Volume 1: Avoiding the Pitfalls of Database Programming.


If you want to do this with PHP, you could do something like this (not tested):

<?php
$mysqli->begin_transaction();
$result = $mysqli->query("SELECT COUNT(*) FROM mytable")
$row = $result->fetch_row(); 
$count = $row[0]; 
$offset = mt_rand(0, $count);
$result = $mysqli->query("SELECT * FROM mytable LIMIT 1 OFFSET $offset");
...
$mysqli->commit();
9
  • Wow, this is high level of SQL. This is possible on PHP? and its the full code which I need to write on mysqli_query()?
    – Daniel
    Jul 1, 2011 at 0:17
  • Maybe it'd be usefull for that script to use mysqli::prepare
    – Lumbendil
    Jul 4, 2011 at 7:29
  • 2
    @Lumbendil: I do support using parameters where appropriate. In the above example, the risk of SQL injection is minimal. We know the value came from rand(), and that function only returns integers. Jul 4, 2011 at 14:17
  • 1
    But, in case of wanting to retrieve multiple rows, the query could be executed multiple times without having to be analyzed on multiple ocasions.
    – Lumbendil
    Jul 6, 2011 at 9:50
  • 1
    @thekosmix, you shouldn't need to do that subquery, because regardless, the WHERE condition will limit the number of rows before it applies ORDER BY. Oct 9, 2013 at 6:46
2
select ID, NAME, CLASS
from YOURTABLE
where CLASS='one'
order by rand()
limit $x

ordering by rand() is not particularly efficient, but it's about the smallest/quickest way of doing it.

3
  • Notice: I use big table, and ORDER BY RAND() bom all rows in the table and its very slowly.
    – Daniel
    Jun 30, 2011 at 22:25
  • Yes, but it'd only be sorting the rows where class is 'one', not the entire table.
    – Marc B
    Jun 30, 2011 at 22:25
  • the class "one" can include thousands of rows. By the way, can I get your messenger & skype?
    – Daniel
    Jun 30, 2011 at 22:28
0
SELECT * FROM `table` WHERE `class`="one" ORDER BY RAND() LIMIT 5
1
  • Notice: I use big table, and ORDER BY RAND() bom all rows in the table and its very slowly.
    – Daniel
    Jun 30, 2011 at 22:23

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