I have two tables. Let's call it: SEATS and SEAT_ALLOCATION_RULE table.
Below are the table schema:
CREATE TABLE IF NOT EXISTS `SEATS` (
`SeatID` int(11) NOT NULL AUTO_INCREMENT,
`SeatName` varchar(255) NOT NULL DEFAULT '',
PRIMARY KEY (`SeatID`)
) ENGINE=InnoDB DEFAULT CHARSET=latin1 AUTO_INCREMENT=9 ;
INSERT INTO `SEATS` (`SeatID`, `SeatName`) VALUES
(1, 'Super VIP'),
(2, 'VIP'),
(3, 'Business'),
(4, 'Economy'),
(5, 'Standing');
CREATE TABLE IF NOT EXISTS `SEAT_ALLOCATION_RULE` (
`SeatID` int(11) NOT NULL DEFAULT '0',
`Origin` varchar(50) NOT NULL DEFAULT '0',
`Destination` varchar(50) NOT NULL DEFAULT '',
`Passenger_Type` varchar(25) NOT NULL DEFAULT '',
PRIMARY KEY (`SeatID`,`Origin`,`Destination`,`Passenger_Type`)
) ENGINE=InnoDB DEFAULT CHARSET=latin1;
INSERT INTO `SEAT_ALLOCATION_RULE` (`SeatID`, `Origin`, `Destination, `Passenger_Type`) VALUES
(1, 'Malaysia','',''),
(2, 'Malaysia','Singapore',''),
(3, 'Malaysia','Singapore','Senior_Citizen'),
(4, 'Bangkok','Japan','Student'),
(5, 'Cambodia','China','Senior_Citizen');
SEAT_ALLOCATION_RULE table determines which seat should a passenger be assigned to based on the following order in priority:
1. Origin, destination, and passenger_type match
2. Origin and destination match
3. Origin match
It means that if all the fields (origin, destination, and passenger_type) match, it should take higher priority than if it is just two fields match and so on. If a column is empty, it is considered as unspecified and hence has lower priority. So, for example:
Now, based on the rules above, if the origin is Malaysia, destination is Singapore, and Passenger_Type is student, the query to return seatID is as follow:
SELECT s.SeatID, s.SeatName
FROM SEATS s
WHERE
CASE WHEN EXISTS(
select 1
from SEAT_ALLOCATION_RULE r
where s.SeatID = r.SeatID
AND r.Origin = 'Malaysia'
AND r.Destination = 'Singapore'
AND r.Passenger_Type='Student') Then 1
WHEN EXISTS(
select 1
from SEAT_ALLOCATION_RULE r
where s.SeatID = r.SeatID
AND r.Origin = 'Malaysia'
AND r.Destination = 'Singapore'
AND r.Passenger_Type='') Then 1
WHEN EXISTS(
select 1
from SEAT_ALLOCATION_RULE r
where s.SeatID = r.SeatID
AND r.Origin = 'Malaysia'
AND r.Destination = ''
AND r.Passenger_Type='') Then 1 END
However, the query above does not work as it will return seatID 1 and 2, but the expected output is only seatID 2 (since origin and destination matches and it takes higher precedence). Can someone help to correct my SQL query?
This should do the trick:
select seatid
from seat_allocation_rule sar
order by ((sar.origin = :origin) << 2) + ((sar.destination = :destination) << 1) + (sar.passenger_type = :passenger_type) desc,
((sar.origin <> '') << 2) + ((sar.destination <> '') << 1) + (sar.passenger_type <> '') asc
limit 1
To understand how:
create table testcase (
origin varchar(255),
destination varchar(255),
passenger_type varchar(255),
expected_seat int(11)
);
insert into testcase values ('Malaysia','Singapore','Senior_Citizen',3),
('Malaysia','Singapore','Student',2),
('Malaysia','US','Student',1);
select * from (
select tc.*,
sar.seatid,
case when sar.seatid = tc.expected_seat then 'Y' else '-' end as pass,
((sar.origin = tc.origin) << 2)
+ ((sar.destination = tc.destination) << 1)
+ ((sar.passenger_type = tc.passenger_type) << 0) as score,
((sar.origin <> '') << 2)
+ ((sar.destination <> '') << 1)
+ ((sar.passenger_type <> '') << 0) as priority
from seat_allocation_rule sar
cross join testcase tc
) x order by expected_seat desc, score desc, priority asc;
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