I'll do some tests with your technique below and see which works better..
Mike
On Wed, Dec 16, 2009 at 7:01 AM, Sam Mason <sam@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
On Wed, Dec 16, 2009 at 12:47:36AM -0800, Mike Christensen wrote:If you expect the number of blacklisted recipes to be low, the
> When the user searches for a new pasta dish, the UI would generate a query
> something like this:
>
> SELECT * FROM Recipes where RecipeTitle ilike '%pasta%';
>
> I only need the data from the recipes table since I display a summary of the
> search results and don't load the full recipe until the user clicks on the
> link. This works great. However, I'm now in the process of implementing an
> ingredient blacklist. This means NEVER show me any recipes which have one
> of my blacklisted ingredients, as if I ingest any I will die a painful
> death.
following may be a good alternative as well:
SELECT r.*
FROM recipes r LEFT JOIN (
SELECT i.recipeid FROM ingredients i, blacklist b
WHERE i.ingredientid = b.ingredientid
AND b.userid = 123
GROUP BY i.recipeid) x ON r.recipeid = x.recipeid
WHERE r.recipetitle ILIKE '%pasta%'
AND x.recipeid IS NULL;
Note that it's generally considered bad form to include "*" in the
return of a query when it's code dealing with the response. Humans can
deal with the columns coming back differently, but code has the habit of
getting confused.
Also, you may want to consider using full text search when searching the
titles. That ILIKE requires a full table scan and will slow down as
more recipes get added.
--
Sam http://samason.me.uk/
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