开发者

How does MySQL process ORDER BY and LIMIT in a query?

I have a query that looks l开发者_运维百科ike this:

SELECT article FROM table1 ORDER BY publish_date LIMIT 20

How does ORDER BY work? Will it order all records, then get the first 20, or will it get 20 records and order them by the publish_date field?

If it's the last one, you're not guaranteed to really get the most recent 20 articles.


It will order first, then get the first 20. A database will also process anything in the WHERE clause before ORDER BY.


The LIMIT clause can be used to constrain the number of rows returned by the SELECT statement. LIMIT takes one or two numeric arguments, which must both be nonnegative integer constants (except when using prepared statements).

With two arguments, the first argument specifies the offset of the first row to return, and the second specifies the maximum number of rows to return. The offset of the initial row is 0 (not 1):

SELECT * FROM tbl LIMIT 5,10; # Retrieve rows 6-15

To retrieve all rows from a certain offset up to the end of the result set, you can use some large number for the second parameter. This statement retrieves all rows from the 96th row to the last:

SELECT * FROM tbl LIMIT 95,18446744073709551615;

With one argument, the value specifies the number of rows to return from the beginning of the result set:

SELECT * FROM tbl LIMIT 5; # Retrieve first 5 rows

In other words, LIMIT row_count is equivalent to LIMIT 0, row_count.

All details on: http://dev.mysql.com/doc/refman/5.0/en/select.html


Just as @James says, it will order all records, then get the first 20 rows.

As it is so, you are guaranteed to get the 20 first published articles, the newer ones will not be shown.

In your situation, I recommend that you add desc to order by publish_date, if you want the newest articles, then the newest article will be first.

If you need to keep the result in ascending order, and still only want the 10 newest articles you can ask mysql to sort your result two times.

This query below will sort the result descending and limit the result to 10 (that is the query inside the parenthesis). It will still be sorted in descending order, and we are not satisfied with that, so we ask mysql to sort it one more time. Now we have the newest result on the last row.

select t.article 
from 
    (select article, publish_date 
     from table1
     order by publish_date desc limit 10) t 

order by t.publish_date asc;

If you need all columns, it is done this way:

select t.* 
from 
    (select * 
     from table1  
     order by publish_date desc limit 10) t 

order by t.publish_date asc;

I use this technique when I manually write queries to examine the database for various things. I have not used it in a production environment, but now when I bench marked it, the extra sorting does not impact the performance.


You could add [asc] or [desc] at the end of the order by to get the earliest or latest records

For example, this will give you the latest records first

ORDER BY stamp DESC

Append the LIMIT clause after ORDER BY


If there is a suitable index, in this case on the publish_date field, then MySQL need not scan the whole index to get the 20 records requested - the 20 records will be found at the start of the index. But if there is no suitable index, then a full scan of the table will be needed.

There is a MySQL Performance Blog article from 2009 on this.


You can use this code SELECT article FROM table1 ORDER BY publish_date LIMIT 0,10 where 0 is a start limit of record & 10 number of record


LIMIT is usually applied as the last operation, so the result will first be sorted and then limited to 20. In fact, sorting will stop as soon as first 20 sorted results are found.


Could be simplified to this:

SELECT article FROM table1 ORDER BY publish_date DESC FETCH FIRST 20 ROWS ONLY;

You could also add many argument in the ORDER BY that is just comma separated like: ORDER BY publish_date, tab2, tab3 DESC etc...

0

上一篇:

下一篇:

精彩评论

暂无评论...
验证码 换一张
取 消

最新问答

问答排行榜