You guys are just awesome! Thanks already for the help I really
appreciate it!
My site is up on adslgeek.com/troubleshooter but I have a DNS problem
that I have to fix over the weekend. :-(
The scenario is an input dashboard, with various settings that measure
the quality of an ADSL line.
I have then mapped out all of the possible faults that I could think of
that might fit those settings(did up a flowchart of questions that is huge).
So for simplicity say the inputs are:
- X Noise on line
- X Distance from exchange
- X Disconnections per day
- Slow speed of x
Then I have a list of all the possible scenarios eg
1) Disconnections caused by noisy line
2) Disconnections caused by distance
3) Slow due to noisey line
4) Slow due to distance
So how I have currently done this is heaps of nested if statements, but
that is going to get so unmanageable, and the speed is going to become a
factor.
What I had envisioned was input all the possible vars, and then SQL just
finds the closest variable. It is kind of similar in logic to a search
engine type script - if I had the strings "disconnections" and "noisey
of 52" then it just finds the closest record.
Does that make sense? Thanks heaps you guys have been so helpful.
Cheers,
Aslan
Micah Gersten wrote:
Here's the info on the "weirdness" of between:
http://dev.mysql.com/doc/refman/5.0/en/comparison-operators.html#operator_between
Thank you,
Micah Gersten
onShore Networks
Internal Developer
http://www.onshore.com
VamVan wrote:
Hey,
For ranges you can also use "Between" in the mysql queries.
SELECT * FROM table WHERE Type= "Attainable" AND Min LIKE $var can be
written as
Select * from table where between min and max
Just remember that "between" acts a bit wierd with dates or else Jim's
solution would be perfect for you.
Thanks
On Wed, Jul 23, 2008 at 7:58 AM, Jim Lucas <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Aslan wrote:
Hey there,
I have a range of records that represent different faults and different
symptoms that I want to pull out of the database, and to find the records
that are the closest within each range.
I am currently doing it with a barrage of if statements, but I am sure
that this could be done faster and far more elegantly by using SQL
I have a range of conditions eg
Attainable rates:
0-500 KB/sec is very poor
500 - 1000 is marginal
1000- 3000 KB/sec is good
So the database may look like:
Type|Min|Max|Value
Attainable|0|500|" This rate is very poor"
and then SQL could go something like
SELECT * FROM table WHERE Type= "Attainable" AND Min LIKE $var
You're close, try this
SELECT *
FROM table
WHERE Type = "Attainable"
AND Min <= $var
AND Max >= $var
as long as your min and max do not overlap from row to row, you should only
get one result. Make sure in your data that you have no overlap.
Row 1 = 0 - 499
Row 2 = 500 - 999
Row 3 = 1000 - 1499
But that wouldn't work quite right I don't think.
But where it can get a bit more hairy is that I want to have a whole range
of variables that are input from an entry table, and then it just finds the
the vars that are the closest to what is searching for all the vars. The
closest code I have seen doing something similar is where there it is
finding if an IP is in a certain range.
Does that make sense? feel free to email me if you need more explanation.
It is kind of like a multi variable search engine, that is finding the
root cause of the symptoms that are the very best fit given the
multi-variables...
Thanks heaps for any assistance,
Aslan.
--
Jim Lucas
"Some men are born to greatness, some achieve greatness,
and some have greatness thrust upon them."
Twelfth Night, Act II, Scene V
by William Shakespeare
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