I am using node-mysql, node-js, and Q promises.
I have successfully updated, deleted, and inserted single rows using the above. As well as inserted multiple rows in a single statement in my test case scenario.
However, I need to update multiple rows with different values (batch mode) either in a single query or in a for loop.
The information on how to use prepared statements in mysql2 (supposed to improve on node-mysql) is very sparse and there are no examples, although that should be the natural choice, together with promises to compensate for node-js asynchronous nature.
In addition, I have successfully used defered.makeNodeResolver() in various test scenarios.
I am trying to update multiple rows in a single query with a where clause and changing conditions.
It is working when I update a single row. However, when I try to update multiple rows with a single query, the records aren't updated.
I am ready to switch to using a for loop to perform multiple updates and then aggregate the result and send it back from the server to the client, which would have been my second preferred choice. And I don't see why it shouldn't be done that way if there isn't too much of a performance hit. But I haven't found any examples for doing it that way.
var values = [
{ users: "tom", id: 101 },
{ users: "george", id: 102 }
];
// var params = [values.users, values.id ];
var sql = 'UPDATE tabletest SET users = ? WHERE id = ?;';
connection.query(sql, [{users: values[0].users}, {id: values[0].id }], defered.makeNodeResolver());
The code shown above isn't actually updating multiple rows. I imagine there's an error in my syntax.
But anyway, what is the best approach to go about this in this particular scenario? Prepared statements, repeated queries in a for loop, or stored procedures?
You can do it this way:
var values = [
{ users: "tom", id: 101 },
{ users: "george", id: 102 }
];
var queries = '';
values.forEach(function (item) {
queries += mysql.format("UPDATE tabletest SET users = ? WHERE id = ?; ", item);
});
connection.query(queries, defered.makeNodeResolver());
To use multiple statements feature you have to enable it for your connection:
var connection = mysql.createConnection({
...
multipleStatements: true,
});
You should probably do following way
UPDATE DB.table
SET table.row = newValue WHERE table.someColumn in ('columnVal1', 'columnVal2');
ex.
UPDATE DB.Students
SET result = "pass" WHERE rollNo in (21, 34, 50);
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