I need a some stored procedure that called like:
search('foo bar')
makes a search similar to:
SELECT FROM A, B
WHERE A.B_ID = B.ID
AND (A.f1 LIKE '%foo开发者_运维百科%' OR A.f2 LIKE '%foo%' OR B.f3 LIKE '%foo%')
AND (A.f1 LIKE '%bar%' OR A.f2 LIKE '%bar%' OR B.f3 LIKE '%bar%')
And I have some doubts and questions:
I can't pass an array to the procedure, so my only option is to pass the string directly as in the example ('foo bar')?
So I assume I have to do the split in SP code. I didn't know how, so I searched and found this solution. Is using temporary tables and what I think a lot of clumsy code. Is really so complicated? How about the performance?
I don't know how to create such dynamic query. I suppose I have to loop over the tokens to create a new block of the WHERE clause for everyone, but I'm not sure how to do this or if it's the best solution. Maybe concatenating strings and then making a prepared statement is better?
Thanks.
Note: I use iBATIS (Java) for calling this routine.
What you want is to use Full Text Searching (FTS) - there's MySQL's native FTS functionality which can only be used on MyISAM tables, and 3rd party FTS like Sphinx, to choose from. Here's an online slideshow that's a decent intro & howto.
Using MySQL native FTS, your query would resemble:
SELECT *
FROM A AS a
JOIN B AS b ON b.id = a.b_id
WHERE MATCH (a.f1, a.f2, b.f3) AGAINST ('foo bar');
Dynamic SQL is still an option, depending on how strong you want/need to make the query. I'd look into the FTS offerings before I'd consider dynamic SQL...
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