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I have two tables one with cities and one with pois. I want find cities or pois from query string. Query string could be ABC coffee shop or San Francisco. The following query executes but returns empty set an suggestions?

SELECT cities.city, cities.state, pois.name FROM cities, pois 
WHERE cities.city OR pois.name LIKE '$queryString%';

Table: cities

+---------+-------+---------------+
| city_id | state | city          |
+---------+-------+---------------+
|       4 | CA    | San Francisco |
+---------+-------+---------------+

Table: pois

+--------+---------+-------------------------------+
| loc_id | city_id | name                          |
+--------+---------+-------------------------------+
|      2 |       4 | San Francisco Coffee Roasters |
+--------+---------+-------------------------------+

Update: Based on @Johan's answer I created the following query which return the results below. The results returned are correct, but I would like to also return a separate row like example A reults using something similar to example A query. I think a union is what I need?

 SELECT p.name, c.city, c.state
FROM cities c
INNER JOIN pois p ON ( p.city_id = c.city_id )
WHERE p.name LIKE '%San Francisco%'


+-------------------------------+---------------+-------+
| name                          | city          | state |
+-------------------------------+---------------+-------+
| San Francisco Coffee Roasters | San Francisco | CA    |
+-------------------------------+---------------+-------+

Example A query: !!! This query returns error #1222 - The used SELECT statements have a different number of columns

SELECT p.name, c.city, c.state
FROM cities c
INNER JOIN pois p ON ( p.city_id = c.city_id )
WHERE p.name LIKE '%San Francisco%'
UNION SELECT c.city, c.state
FROM cities c
WHERE c.city LIKE '%San Francisco%'

Example A result:

+-------------------------------+---------------+-------+
| name                          | city          | state |
+-------------------------------+---------------+-------+
| San Francisco Coffee Roasters | San Francisco | CA    |
+-------------------------------+---------------+-------+
+---------------+-------+
| city          | state |
+---------------+-------+
| San Francisco | CA    |
+---------------+-------+
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  • all tables fields, available data sample and expected result would help to asnwer your question
    – Andrey
    Sep 6, 2011 at 19:48

4 Answers 4

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A few comments beforehand:

• Do not use SQL '89 style implicit join syntax, it's an anti-pattern.
• Use explicit SQL '92 join syntax instead, see the first example below.
• If $querystring comes from a user you need to escape it, see first example.

Here's example code:

$querystring = mysql_real_escape_string($querystring);
$query = "SELECT c.name, p.name FROM cities c 
          INNER JOIN pios p ON (p.city_id = c.id)
          WHERE c.name LIKE '%$querystring%' 
             OR p.name LIKE '%$querystring%' ";

Or maybe you want a UNION

$query = "SELECT c.name FROM cities c 
          WHERE c.name LIKE '%$querystring%'
        UNION
          SELECT p.name FROM pios p 
          WHERE p.name LIKE '%$querystring%' ";

EDIT AS PER REQUEST
If you use union, all selects involved must produce the same number of columns.
If you have no data, just substitute null.

SELECT p.name, c.city, c.state
FROM cities c
INNER JOIN pois p ON ( p.city_id = c.city_id )
WHERE p.name LIKE '%San Francisco%'
UNION 
SELECT NULL as name, c.city, c.state
FROM cities c
WHERE c.city LIKE '%San Francisco%'
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2

To do this with a join:

SELECT C.city, C.state, P.name 
FROM cities C
LEFT JOIN pois P ON P.city_id=C.id
WHERE C.city LIKE '$queryString%'
  OR P.name LIKE '$queryString%'
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  • I think you'll need OR (P.name LIKE '$queryString%' or p.Name is null) for the LEFT JOIN to meaningful. Or you could make it an INNER JOIN Sep 6, 2011 at 19:55
  • I think it's hard to tell without seeing the database schema Sep 6, 2011 at 19:59
  • 1
    its not a function of the schema. See Left join turns into inner join Sep 6, 2011 at 20:00
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SELECT DISTINCT p.name, c.city, c.state
FROM cities c
LEFT OUTER JOIN pois p ON p.city_id = c.city_id 
WHERE cities.city LIKE '%$queryString%' 
OR pois.name LIKE '%$queryString%';

alternatively,

SELECT p.name, c.city, c.state
FROM cities c
INNER JOIN pois p ON p.city_id = c.city_id
WHERE p.name LIKE '%$queryString%'
UNION SELECT NULL, c.city, c.state
FROM cities c
WHERE c.city LIKE '%$queryString%'
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  • you should definitely have a join clause there, although Thorsten's post may be legal syntax, I haven't tried it. Sep 6, 2011 at 19:49
  • Thorsten's way is how we wrote it back in the 1980's. But it implies a join.
    – Martin
    Sep 6, 2011 at 19:52
  • I haven't tried it, too. I think the answer depends on what data the post author wants to receive, and how they are connected, if they are.
    – Thorsten
    Sep 6, 2011 at 19:54
  • I updated my question to clarify exactly what I need. Can you please answer the question again.
    – Enki
    Sep 8, 2011 at 18:03
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SELECT cities.city, cities.state, pois.name FROM cities, pois 
WHERE cities.city LIKE '$queryString%' OR pois.name LIKE '$queryString%';
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