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How to find missing rows (dates) in a mysql table?

I have tried several topics like this one: How to find missing data rows using SQL? here, but I couldn't make it work in my situation.

I have a table named posts in MySQL which I save user diaries in it every day. Sometimes users forget to write a post for a day and I want to make it possible for them to submit it later. So the db structures like this:

date           userid
2011-10-01     1
2011-10-02     1
(missing)
2011-10-04     1
2011-10-05     1
(missing)
2011-10-07     1

So I want to show a dr开发者_开发问答opdown list of missing dates in this table of missing rows to user, so he can select the date he wants to submit the post for.

How can I do this? Thanks.


The simplest way to find missing dates is to use a calendar table. I've posted code to create and populate a calendar table for PostgreSQL; you should be able to adapt it without any trouble.

With the calendar table in place, your query is pretty simple, and easy to understand. To find the missing dates for October, 2011, you'd use something along these lines. (Guessing at your "posts" table.)

select c.cal_date
from calendar c
left join posts p on (c.cal_date = p.date)
where p.date is null
  and c.cal_date between '2011-10-01' and '2011-10-31'
  and p.userid = 1
order by c.cal_date


These types of queries are easiest to solve if you have a date table. In your DB, run this batch as a one-off to create a filled date table.

DROP PROCEDURE IF EXISTS FillDateTable;

delimiter //
CREATE PROCEDURE FillDateTable()
    LANGUAGE SQL
    NOT DETERMINISTIC
    CONTAINS SQL
    SQL SECURITY DEFINER
    COMMENT ''
BEGIN
  drop table if exists datetable;
  create table datetable (thedate datetime primary key, isweekday smallint);

  SET @x := date('2000-01-01');
  REPEAT 
    insert into datetable (thedate, isweekday) SELECT @x, case when dayofweek(@x) in (1,7) then 0 else 1 end;
    SET @x := date_add(@x, interval 1 day);
    UNTIL @x >= '2030-12-31' END REPEAT;
END//
delimiter ;

CALL FillDateTable;

Then you can just use a regular LEFT JOIN

SELECT thedate
FROM datetable
LEFT JOIN posts on posts.date = datetable.thedate
WHERE posts.date IS NULL

Of course you don't want all "missing" dates from 2000 to 2030. Limit it to the MIN and MAX dates in the posts table (for the user), i.e.

SELECT thedate
FROM datetable
INNER JOIN (select min(date) postStart, max(date) postEnd
            FROM posts
            where userid=123) p on datetable.thedate BETWEEN p.postStart and p.postEnd
LEFT JOIN posts on posts.date = datetable.thedate
WHERE posts.date IS NULL


You could automatically enter an empty post each time (end of day) with null titles, null contents but actual date. Then, if the user wants to add a post for a previous day, display all the posts with null titles and contents and update the one he selects.

This shouldn't be a space problem, not if they write more than they miss. For instance, if they write for 4 days and miss 1.

Also, you would run a script and delete entries with null titles, null contents AND date older than X days. If they haven't added the missing post for X days, they probably will never do.

I apologize if my solution is trivial / too abstract.


select  
    t0.date,
    t1.date1
    if(t1.date1 is null, date_add(t0.date, interval 1 day), '') missing_date
from
(select date from posts group by date) t0
left join
(select date_add(date, interval 1 day) date1 from posts group by date) t1
on t0.date = t1.date1
order by t0.date asc

You can find the missing date this way. Be careful you need to remove the last row, you can choose a way that suits you to achieve that.

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