Spec-Zone .ru
спецификации, руководства, описания, API
|
The pet
table keeps track of which pets you have. If you want to record other
information about them, such as events in their lives like visits to the vet or when litters are born, you need
another table. What should this table look like? It needs to contain the following information:
The pet name so that you know which animal each event pertains to.
A date so that you know when the event occurred.
A field to describe the event.
An event type field, if you want to be able to categorize events.
Given these considerations, the CREATE
TABLE
statement for the event
table might look like this:
mysql>CREATE TABLE event (name VARCHAR(20), date DATE,
->type VARCHAR(15), remark VARCHAR(255));
As with the pet
table, it is easiest to load the initial records by creating a
tab-delimited text file containing the following information.
name | date | type | remark |
---|---|---|---|
Fluffy | 1995-05-15 | litter | 4 kittens, 3 female, 1 male |
Buffy | 1993-06-23 | litter | 5 puppies, 2 female, 3 male |
Buffy | 1994-06-19 | litter | 3 puppies, 3 female |
Chirpy | 1999-03-21 | vet | needed beak straightened |
Slim | 1997-08-03 | vet | broken rib |
Bowser | 1991-10-12 | kennel | |
Fang | 1991-10-12 | kennel | |
Fang | 1998-08-28 | birthday | Gave him a new chew toy |
Claws | 1998-03-17 | birthday | Gave him a new flea collar |
Whistler | 1998-12-09 | birthday | First birthday |
Load the records like this:
mysql> LOAD DATA LOCAL INFILE 'event.txt' INTO TABLE
event;
Based on what you have learned from the queries that you have run on the pet
table,
you should be able to perform retrievals on the records in the event
table; the
principles are the same. But when is the event
table by itself insufficient to
answer questions you might ask?
Suppose that you want to find out the ages at which each pet had its litters. We saw earlier how to calculate
ages from two dates. The litter date of the mother is in the event
table, but to
calculate her age on that date you need her birth date, which is stored in the pet
table. This means the query requires both tables:
mysql>SELECT pet.name,
->(YEAR(date)-YEAR(birth)) - (RIGHT(date,5)<RIGHT(birth,5)) AS age,
->remark
->FROM pet INNER JOIN event
->ON pet.name = event.name
->WHERE event.type = 'litter';
+--------+------+-----------------------------+| name | age | remark |+--------+------+-----------------------------+| Fluffy | 2 | 4 kittens, 3 female, 1 male || Buffy | 4 | 5 puppies, 2 female, 3 male || Buffy | 5 | 3 puppies, 3 female |+--------+------+-----------------------------+
There are several things to note about this query:
The FROM
clause joins two tables because the query
needs to pull information from both of them.
When combining (joining) information from multiple tables, you need to specify how
records in one table can be matched to records in the other. This is easy because they both have a name
column. The query uses an ON
clause to
match up records in the two tables based on the name
values.
The query uses an INNER JOIN
to combine the tables. An INNER JOIN
permits rows from either table to appear in the result if and
only if both tables meet the conditions specified in the ON
clause. In
this example, the ON
clause specifies that the name
column in the pet
table must match the name
column in the event
table. If a
name appears in one table but not the other, the row will not appear in the result because the
condition in the ON
clause fails.
Because the name
column occurs in both tables, you
must be specific about which table you mean when referring to the column. This is done by prepending the
table name to the column name.
You need not have two different tables to perform a join. Sometimes it is useful to join a table to itself, if
you want to compare records in a table to other records in that same table. For example, to find breeding pairs
among your pets, you can join the pet
table with itself to produce candidate pairs
of males and females of like species:
mysql>SELECT p1.name, p1.sex, p2.name, p2.sex, p1.species
->FROM pet AS p1 INNER JOIN pet AS p2
->ON p1.species = p2.species AND p1.sex = 'f' AND p2.sex = 'm';
+--------+------+--------+------+---------+| name | sex | name | sex | species |+--------+------+--------+------+---------+| Fluffy | f | Claws | m | cat || Buffy | f | Fang | m | dog || Buffy | f | Bowser | m | dog |+--------+------+--------+------+---------+
In this query, we specify aliases for the table name to refer to the columns and keep straight which instance of the table each column reference is associated with.