count in group_concat in mysql in one query





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1















I have one to many table relationship :




  • one user for multiple event

  • one event for multiple event_attribute


Now, I group by userId and want to know how many for each event attribute ?



Below is the data schema you can use:



To be more specific, this is the DB schema I am using:



CREATE TABLE `user` (
`id` int(11) NOT NULL,
`name` varchar(45) DEFAULT NULL,
PRIMARY KEY (`id`),
UNIQUE KEY `id_UNIQUE` (`id`)
);
CREATE TABLE `event` (
`id` int(11) NOT NULL,
`name` varchar(45) DEFAULT NULL,
`user_id` int(11) DEFAULT NULL,
PRIMARY KEY (`id`)
);
CREATE TABLE `event_attr` (
`id` int(11) NOT NULL,
`att_name` varchar(45) DEFAULT NULL,
`event_id` varchar(45) DEFAULT NULL,
PRIMARY KEY (`id`)
);
INSERT INTO `user` VALUES (1,'user1'),(2,'user2'),(3,'user3');
INSERT INTO `event` VALUES (1,'event1',1),(2,'event2',1),(3,'event3',1),(4,'event4',2),(5,'event5',2),(6,'event6',3);
INSERT INTO `event_attr` VALUES (1,'att1','1'),(2,'att2','1'),(3,'att3','1'),(4,'att1','2'),(5,'att2',NULL);


Now if I am running:



select u.id, group_concat(e.name)
from user u
join event e on u.id=e.user_id
group by u.id


I will get:



1 event1,event2,event3
2 event4,event6
3 event 6


That is fine. But one step forward, I need to know count for each event_attt for each user, such as:



1 evet_att1:3;event_att2:2
2 event_att3:1


Then it is not possible. Can I use just one query to get above expected response?










share|improve this question





























    1















    I have one to many table relationship :




    • one user for multiple event

    • one event for multiple event_attribute


    Now, I group by userId and want to know how many for each event attribute ?



    Below is the data schema you can use:



    To be more specific, this is the DB schema I am using:



    CREATE TABLE `user` (
    `id` int(11) NOT NULL,
    `name` varchar(45) DEFAULT NULL,
    PRIMARY KEY (`id`),
    UNIQUE KEY `id_UNIQUE` (`id`)
    );
    CREATE TABLE `event` (
    `id` int(11) NOT NULL,
    `name` varchar(45) DEFAULT NULL,
    `user_id` int(11) DEFAULT NULL,
    PRIMARY KEY (`id`)
    );
    CREATE TABLE `event_attr` (
    `id` int(11) NOT NULL,
    `att_name` varchar(45) DEFAULT NULL,
    `event_id` varchar(45) DEFAULT NULL,
    PRIMARY KEY (`id`)
    );
    INSERT INTO `user` VALUES (1,'user1'),(2,'user2'),(3,'user3');
    INSERT INTO `event` VALUES (1,'event1',1),(2,'event2',1),(3,'event3',1),(4,'event4',2),(5,'event5',2),(6,'event6',3);
    INSERT INTO `event_attr` VALUES (1,'att1','1'),(2,'att2','1'),(3,'att3','1'),(4,'att1','2'),(5,'att2',NULL);


    Now if I am running:



    select u.id, group_concat(e.name)
    from user u
    join event e on u.id=e.user_id
    group by u.id


    I will get:



    1 event1,event2,event3
    2 event4,event6
    3 event 6


    That is fine. But one step forward, I need to know count for each event_attt for each user, such as:



    1 evet_att1:3;event_att2:2
    2 event_att3:1


    Then it is not possible. Can I use just one query to get above expected response?










    share|improve this question

























      1












      1








      1








      I have one to many table relationship :




      • one user for multiple event

      • one event for multiple event_attribute


      Now, I group by userId and want to know how many for each event attribute ?



      Below is the data schema you can use:



      To be more specific, this is the DB schema I am using:



      CREATE TABLE `user` (
      `id` int(11) NOT NULL,
      `name` varchar(45) DEFAULT NULL,
      PRIMARY KEY (`id`),
      UNIQUE KEY `id_UNIQUE` (`id`)
      );
      CREATE TABLE `event` (
      `id` int(11) NOT NULL,
      `name` varchar(45) DEFAULT NULL,
      `user_id` int(11) DEFAULT NULL,
      PRIMARY KEY (`id`)
      );
      CREATE TABLE `event_attr` (
      `id` int(11) NOT NULL,
      `att_name` varchar(45) DEFAULT NULL,
      `event_id` varchar(45) DEFAULT NULL,
      PRIMARY KEY (`id`)
      );
      INSERT INTO `user` VALUES (1,'user1'),(2,'user2'),(3,'user3');
      INSERT INTO `event` VALUES (1,'event1',1),(2,'event2',1),(3,'event3',1),(4,'event4',2),(5,'event5',2),(6,'event6',3);
      INSERT INTO `event_attr` VALUES (1,'att1','1'),(2,'att2','1'),(3,'att3','1'),(4,'att1','2'),(5,'att2',NULL);


      Now if I am running:



      select u.id, group_concat(e.name)
      from user u
      join event e on u.id=e.user_id
      group by u.id


      I will get:



      1 event1,event2,event3
      2 event4,event6
      3 event 6


      That is fine. But one step forward, I need to know count for each event_attt for each user, such as:



      1 evet_att1:3;event_att2:2
      2 event_att3:1


      Then it is not possible. Can I use just one query to get above expected response?










      share|improve this question














      I have one to many table relationship :




      • one user for multiple event

      • one event for multiple event_attribute


      Now, I group by userId and want to know how many for each event attribute ?



      Below is the data schema you can use:



      To be more specific, this is the DB schema I am using:



      CREATE TABLE `user` (
      `id` int(11) NOT NULL,
      `name` varchar(45) DEFAULT NULL,
      PRIMARY KEY (`id`),
      UNIQUE KEY `id_UNIQUE` (`id`)
      );
      CREATE TABLE `event` (
      `id` int(11) NOT NULL,
      `name` varchar(45) DEFAULT NULL,
      `user_id` int(11) DEFAULT NULL,
      PRIMARY KEY (`id`)
      );
      CREATE TABLE `event_attr` (
      `id` int(11) NOT NULL,
      `att_name` varchar(45) DEFAULT NULL,
      `event_id` varchar(45) DEFAULT NULL,
      PRIMARY KEY (`id`)
      );
      INSERT INTO `user` VALUES (1,'user1'),(2,'user2'),(3,'user3');
      INSERT INTO `event` VALUES (1,'event1',1),(2,'event2',1),(3,'event3',1),(4,'event4',2),(5,'event5',2),(6,'event6',3);
      INSERT INTO `event_attr` VALUES (1,'att1','1'),(2,'att2','1'),(3,'att3','1'),(4,'att1','2'),(5,'att2',NULL);


      Now if I am running:



      select u.id, group_concat(e.name)
      from user u
      join event e on u.id=e.user_id
      group by u.id


      I will get:



      1 event1,event2,event3
      2 event4,event6
      3 event 6


      That is fine. But one step forward, I need to know count for each event_attt for each user, such as:



      1 evet_att1:3;event_att2:2
      2 event_att3:1


      Then it is not possible. Can I use just one query to get above expected response?







      mysql






      share|improve this question













      share|improve this question











      share|improve this question




      share|improve this question










      asked Nov 22 '18 at 2:46









      user3006967user3006967

      82742139




      82742139
























          1 Answer
          1






          active

          oldest

          votes


















          1














          We can try aggregating the event table first by both user and event, to generate the counts:



          SELECT u.id, GROUP_CONCAT(e.name, ':', CAST(e.cnt AS CHAR(50)))
          FROM user u
          LEFT JOIN
          (
          SELECT id, name, user_id, COUNT(*) AS cnt
          FROM event
          GROUP BY id, name, user_id
          ) e
          ON u.id = e.user_id
          GROUP BY
          u.id;



          Demo






          share|improve this answer


























          • Thanks, but we want to count event_attribute, not event, you are counting event here, any idea?

            – user3006967
            Nov 22 '18 at 23:55











          • Thanks, very good solution. if we need to count attribute, we just need to group by it first, coming up with subQuery and then join again

            – user3006967
            Nov 23 '18 at 0:32












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          1 Answer
          1






          active

          oldest

          votes








          1 Answer
          1






          active

          oldest

          votes









          active

          oldest

          votes






          active

          oldest

          votes









          1














          We can try aggregating the event table first by both user and event, to generate the counts:



          SELECT u.id, GROUP_CONCAT(e.name, ':', CAST(e.cnt AS CHAR(50)))
          FROM user u
          LEFT JOIN
          (
          SELECT id, name, user_id, COUNT(*) AS cnt
          FROM event
          GROUP BY id, name, user_id
          ) e
          ON u.id = e.user_id
          GROUP BY
          u.id;



          Demo






          share|improve this answer


























          • Thanks, but we want to count event_attribute, not event, you are counting event here, any idea?

            – user3006967
            Nov 22 '18 at 23:55











          • Thanks, very good solution. if we need to count attribute, we just need to group by it first, coming up with subQuery and then join again

            – user3006967
            Nov 23 '18 at 0:32
















          1














          We can try aggregating the event table first by both user and event, to generate the counts:



          SELECT u.id, GROUP_CONCAT(e.name, ':', CAST(e.cnt AS CHAR(50)))
          FROM user u
          LEFT JOIN
          (
          SELECT id, name, user_id, COUNT(*) AS cnt
          FROM event
          GROUP BY id, name, user_id
          ) e
          ON u.id = e.user_id
          GROUP BY
          u.id;



          Demo






          share|improve this answer


























          • Thanks, but we want to count event_attribute, not event, you are counting event here, any idea?

            – user3006967
            Nov 22 '18 at 23:55











          • Thanks, very good solution. if we need to count attribute, we just need to group by it first, coming up with subQuery and then join again

            – user3006967
            Nov 23 '18 at 0:32














          1












          1








          1







          We can try aggregating the event table first by both user and event, to generate the counts:



          SELECT u.id, GROUP_CONCAT(e.name, ':', CAST(e.cnt AS CHAR(50)))
          FROM user u
          LEFT JOIN
          (
          SELECT id, name, user_id, COUNT(*) AS cnt
          FROM event
          GROUP BY id, name, user_id
          ) e
          ON u.id = e.user_id
          GROUP BY
          u.id;



          Demo






          share|improve this answer















          We can try aggregating the event table first by both user and event, to generate the counts:



          SELECT u.id, GROUP_CONCAT(e.name, ':', CAST(e.cnt AS CHAR(50)))
          FROM user u
          LEFT JOIN
          (
          SELECT id, name, user_id, COUNT(*) AS cnt
          FROM event
          GROUP BY id, name, user_id
          ) e
          ON u.id = e.user_id
          GROUP BY
          u.id;



          Demo







          share|improve this answer














          share|improve this answer



          share|improve this answer








          edited Nov 22 '18 at 3:20

























          answered Nov 22 '18 at 3:05









          Tim BiegeleisenTim Biegeleisen

          238k13100160




          238k13100160













          • Thanks, but we want to count event_attribute, not event, you are counting event here, any idea?

            – user3006967
            Nov 22 '18 at 23:55











          • Thanks, very good solution. if we need to count attribute, we just need to group by it first, coming up with subQuery and then join again

            – user3006967
            Nov 23 '18 at 0:32



















          • Thanks, but we want to count event_attribute, not event, you are counting event here, any idea?

            – user3006967
            Nov 22 '18 at 23:55











          • Thanks, very good solution. if we need to count attribute, we just need to group by it first, coming up with subQuery and then join again

            – user3006967
            Nov 23 '18 at 0:32

















          Thanks, but we want to count event_attribute, not event, you are counting event here, any idea?

          – user3006967
          Nov 22 '18 at 23:55





          Thanks, but we want to count event_attribute, not event, you are counting event here, any idea?

          – user3006967
          Nov 22 '18 at 23:55













          Thanks, very good solution. if we need to count attribute, we just need to group by it first, coming up with subQuery and then join again

          – user3006967
          Nov 23 '18 at 0:32





          Thanks, very good solution. if we need to count attribute, we just need to group by it first, coming up with subQuery and then join again

          – user3006967
          Nov 23 '18 at 0:32




















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