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I have a large database in which I use LIMIT in order not to fetch all the results of the query every time (It is not necessary). But I have an issue: I need to count the number of results. The dumbest solution is the following and it works:

We just get the data that we need:

SELECT * FROM table_name WHERE param > 3 LIMIT 10

And then we find the length:

SELECT COUNT(1) FROM table_name WHERE param > 3 LIMIT 10

But this solution bugs me because unlike the query in question, the one that I work with is complex and you have to basically run it twice to achieve the result.

Another dumb solution for me was to do:

SELECT COUNT(1), param, anotherparam, additionalparam FROM table_name WHERE param > 3 LIMIT 10

But this results in only one row. At this point I will be ok if it would just fill the count row with the same number, I just need this information without wasting computation time.

Is there a better way to achieve this?

P.S. By the way, I am not looking to get 10 as the result of COUNT, I need the length without LIMIT.

2

Answers


  1. This question is very similar to: How can I count the numbers of rows that a MySQL query returned?

    See also: https://mariadb.com/kb/en/found_rows/

    This is probably the most efficient solution to your problem, but it’s best to test it using EXPLAIN with a reasonably sized dataset.

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  2. You should (probably) run the query twice.

    MySQL does have a FOUND_ROWS() function that reports the number of rows matched before the limit. But using this function is often worse for performance than running the query twice!

    https://www.percona.com/blog/2007/08/28/to-sql_calc_found_rows-or-not-to-sql_calc_found_rows/

    …when we have appropriate indexes for WHERE/ORDER clause in our query, it is much faster to use two separate queries instead of one with SQL_CALC_FOUND_ROWS.

    There are exceptions to every rule, of course. If you don’t have an appropriate index to optimize the query, it could be more costly to run the query twice. The only way to be sure is to repeat the tests shown in that blog, using your data and your query on your server.

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