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Q: slow loading subquery in mysql

Nirav JoshiSELECT * FROM ( SELECT a.appointment_made_date_time as timestamp, a.appoimentid as deleteid, tx.treatment_name, tc.treatment_duration, a.clientname,a.clientmail,a.clientphone, a.date, a.time, w.workername, 'create' AS event, (SELECT COUNT(*) FROM appointments WHERE clientmail = a.clientmail O...

That sub-query shouldn't be a huge issue looking at it - have you got an index across the relevant columns?
Have you created indexes on your tables?
@CD001 Yes i added indexing on columns. on clientname, clientmail, clientphone indexing is activated
Have you run the query with EXPLAIN on the front - see what MySQL thinks the issues might be? You can often use JOINs instead of sub-queries but there's no guarantee they'll be faster (depends on your db and setup).
@MarkoJuvančič Yes i m using indexing.
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@NiravJoshi have a look at: stackoverflow.com/a/6291669/4464204 It might help you.
As far as I know, accessing parent values in subqueries is really heavy for MySQL.
@VatsalShah as you see my query you will understand that i can't use any join on it.
@CD001 Yes i try with EXPLAIN.
This question is practically identical to stackoverflow.com/questions/53609857/… which was added a few minutes earlier. Are you both doing the same piece of homework or something? Or are you both the same person? If so please don't post duplicates under different identities. You might think it gets you more attention but actually what it does is splits resources and expertise between two questions and duplicates effort.
@ADyson it'a same link which you provide here.. Please double check :)
@NiravJoshi Sorry I amended the comment. Please refresh to get the intended link.
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@ADyson i don't know that person.. it's only a co incidence.
A coincidence, maybe, but how so, though? They are working on building the exact same software with the exact same table structure and thought of the exact same query? Or is this really a test question taken from some course or book you are studying? And how are you sure you don't know them? There's no personal identity given.
@ADyson Sorry my bad my colleague also posted that question with different account.. without my knowledge. sorry for that. that question got deleted. Sorry again behalf of him
No problem, it's good not to have duplication. But don't be quite so confident you don't know someone already... :-)
@ADyson I know that person.. from the account he post question.. so i don't know that account's person.. it was totally from out of my knowledge.
OR conditions are troublesome. There is no way to use an index. Try to find another logic.
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@PaulSpiegel do you have any other idea? if yes please suggest.
@NiravJoshi "so i don't know that account's person" yes but you claimed with certainly not to know them at all, without checking, despite it being such an odd coincidence that they had the exact same code as you. That was my point, that's all :-)
@ADyson Ok thank you :)
@NiravJoshi I am not recommending joins in my previous comment, I am referring r4dius's answer on that page: stackoverflow.com/questions/5997991/…
@NiravJoshi The question is if you really need that exact number. IMHO there is no much logic: "Count every row if any of the fields is equal to the actual row". And you call it amount. Amount of what?
@PaulSpiegel i am using the amount for specific purpose. to showing things on frontend.
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Maybe try in several steps: - leave only one select in the subquery (comment the other two out, repeat for all of them) - remove grouping and/or ordering
@MarkoJuvančič Ok i will try as you said.

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