Here's what the statement looks like:
DELETE FROM videoswatched vw2
WHERE vw2.userID IN ( SELECT vw.userID
FROM v开发者_如何学Pythonideoswatched vw
JOIN users u ON vw.userID=u.userID
WHERE u.companyID = 1000
GROUP BY userID )
That looks decent to me, and the SELECT statement works on its own (producing rows with a single column 'userID'.
Basically, I want to delete entries in the 'videoswatched' table where the userID in the videoswatched entry, after joining to the users table, is found to have companyID=1000.
How can I do this without getting the error in my sql syntax? It says the error is near:
vw2 WHERE vw2.userID IN (
SELECT vw.userID FROM videoswatched vw
JOIN users u
and on line 1.
It has already been answered in the comments: You need to remove the table alias, it is not allowed in MySQL's DELETE statement syntax (and there is no need for it, either).
Edit: BTW, Try this (coding from memory, might be wrong):
DELETE vw.*
FROM videoswatched vw
INNER JOIN users u ON vw.userID = u.userID
WHERE u.companyID = 1000;
The MySQL manual says
Note
If you declare an alias for a table, you must use the alias when referring to the table:
DELETE t1 FROM test AS t1, test2 WHERE ...
So, you could try
DELETE vm2 FROM videoswatched vw2 WHERE vw2.userID IN (
SELECT vw.userID FROM videoswatched vw
JOIN users u
ON vw.userID=u.userID
WHERE u.companyID=1000
GROUP BY userID
)
But as mentioned in the comments you can simply do away with the alias
DELETE FROM videoswatched WHERE userID IN (
SELECT vw.userID FROM videoswatched vw
JOIN users u
ON vw.userID=u.userID
WHERE u.companyID=1000
GROUP BY userID
)
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