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07:13
Hey all, quick question (probably simple but I haven't touched SQL in a long while and I must be searching the wrong terms) - If I have a column in a db that contains comma separated values (e.g. '123,456,987'), how should I test if the column contains a particular value, say '456'?
Oops, I just noticed there's only one person here! For anyone that sees this later, I found a solution with a little more searching, but thanks anyway!
 
2 hours later…
09:05
morning
Morning @AndyK
damn, we missed @ARr0w
09:57
yeah
why the dude is not coming anymore...?
@AndyK Think he doesn't have a laptop yet, he was using his University computer for a while but I'd say he's finished there now
maybe we can ship him one
@AndyK You must get paid a lot more than me :O
Nice idea though :-)
10:17
Thanks for such care <#
<3
i've got a laptop
Dell Precision m6500. Good enough for development.
yeah!
how's you andyk!
cold man, cold
you'll get better. Go see a doctor, take meds.
10:33
@ARr0w hey hey he's back!
hi shaneis!
how's you man?
Good good here man, nice to see you back
thanks. You will be now. ^_^
plus a good new. I just got a call today for an interview on monday.
ISR software house.
Nice!
Best o' luck with that one
thanks man! :)
missed you guys.
10:38
It's been quiet enough around here
we've had a few guys come in for help and such but apart from that, it's been silent
10:49
well lets make it alive.
11:08
woot @ARr0w!!!
you should rest, take meds, andyk.
11:46
HI
 
4 hours later…
15:42
How do you do a division in SQL Server using T-SQL so that the result is a decimal? For example, this returns 0: SELECT 198 / 3958
Quick and dirty solution: SELECT 198 * 1.0 / 3958
@Alex That's how I do it
16:05
Thanks, @Shaneis
@Alex No worries
Another question...
I've got a SQL Server stored proc that loops over 12 months to produce some totals
It takes ~30 seconds to run
Not efficient at all
Not sure how to convert this into something using PIVOT perhaps
@Alex Difficult without seeing the script, and maybe some data tbh
Understood. Trying to figure out how to show that...
but you mentioned "looping", sounds RBAR (row-by-agonising-row) based
SQL Server doesn't really like RBAR solutions
also, I'd do an estimated execution plan (Ctrl + L) in SSMS and post that (but that may reveal table names so if you can't show them, ignore this)
16:10
Well, it loops over 12 months to get data for Jan - Dec
Inserts into a temp table for each month one row
@Alex what kind of data are you getting? Mainly is it dependent on the results of the previous months?
Nope, each month is independent
@Alex well so far it sounds good to be done set based :-)
Calculating a bunch of totals for each month and displaying them in a grid
Something like this....
        Total1     Total2     Total3
Jan    5             3            9
Feb    9             8           6
....
@Alex okay...got some sample data?
16:16
hi guys
need one help
hey
I have 300k records in my candidate table and there left join with country and address but the problem is its taking too much time to load only 20 records as I am showing only 20 in datatables
So How can make my query faster considering that i have added indexes to respective columns wherever needed
@Shaneis Let me see what I can do
@Alex thanks @Alex
@Exception oh you have, cause I was going to say indexes? Can you get the execution plan?
Hate loops. Used wrong variable and got the same result for all months
You're welcome :)
Now getting the desired result in 15 seconds... removed an unneeded join
Uh-huh!
16:21
@Alex "unneeded joins", I used to be surprised how often they showed up. Not so much anymore...
Just removed another FROM TABLE that wasn't used.... in my WHILE loop, I was just fetching data for an INSERT using a SELECT
Now it runs in 0 seconds!!!
@Shaneis you mean EXPLAIN SELECT ....... ?
@Exception Possibly, you using Postgres is it?
no its mysql
The old JOINs I had were killing me! Dang!
16:23
@Exception yeah, I keep jumping to Postgres when I see EXPLAIN
yup, that should hopefully do, although MySQL isn't my database.
mysql also has explain ;)
@Exception Damn them!!! :-)
let it be any suggestion
?
I dont have that query right now
But as explained that query is exactly same
any mysql level changes
@Shaneis You had to see what C#'s LINQ queries were actually generating behind the scenes... some crazy CROSS JOINs -- Cartesian products.
@Alex Yeah, problem with LINQ queries is that they have to run successfully on all databases they use so they normally aren't the best for performance queries
although @War loves them
War
War
16:27
ey ... don't go bashing linq ... it's perfect in every way
the problem appears to be the poor implementations of IQueryable that the ORM's have in them
@War I either bash linq or bash my head on the keyboard, your choice
actually I know what it'll be, I'll start bashing my head now...
War
War
I have found that structuring your LINQ queries different can often yield improvements
I have found that choosing a new query root often solves my problems
instead of ...
var result = db.Customers
   .Where(c => c.Id == 1)
   .Select(c => c.Orders);
try something like ...
var result = Db.Orders.Where(o => o.CustomerId = 1);
that seems to be the mistake that most people make
@War oh, now I understand "query root"!
War
War
:)
yeh so the root in this case would either Customers or Orders
usually the worst headaches in LINQ come from choosing the the wrong root
@War makes sense actually :)
War
War
16:33
It sounds stupid when you see it written that way ... but most of the performance complaints or "linq did bad stuff to my db" type complaints I have seen seem to be this problem
EF (the ORM I use these days) is pretty good at building really efficient queries assuming you asked a "good question"
*intelligent question
War
War
reminds of the milk of eggs logic question that goes round facebook ona weekly basis
**'put-some-sort-of-thought-into-the-question' question
@War the 'if they have eggs, get 6' one?
War
War
that's the one
yeah that was funny the first time...then I started seeing it...
War
War
16:36
var result = milk;
if(store.HasEggs) { return new [] { milk, milk, milk, milk, milk, milk } };
return result;
depending how the question is interpretted you could be forgiven for returning only 6 eggs
english to code, doesn't always convert well
hey @War
got to run folks
see ya
War
War
Hey andy
later lol
see ya @AndyK
I'm heading as well
see ya guys
16:54
In many ways, good-old fashioned SQL statements are the best way to get the data you want -- accurately
War
War
17:13
Trouble with that approach is its not maintainable or economically possible in my case
I have an API layer that's queryable ... the business logic generates SQL queries ... recently I had an issue in one particular query so I profiled it ... the SQL statement was 89KB of generated code
we run millions of of unique such queries every day
no possible way I can hand crank that lot
18:04
For the most part, I stick with LINQ and resort to SQL for delete statements (clearing a table)
Considering how it's auto-magically converting our statements into SQL, it does a good job
LINQ and Entity Framework make for an unbeatable combo

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