A proposito, non hai bisogno del join su user_profile.
Se hai un dates
tabella con le date rilevanti, questo è abbastanza facile:
SELECT dates.day AS `Date`, COUNT(DISTINCT ts.user_id) AS user_count
FROM dates
LEFT OUTER JOIN tracked_search AS ts
ON ts.created = dates.day
GROUP BY dates.day;
Dal momento che probabilmente non hai un dates
tabella e potresti non voler crearne e mantenerne una, potresti utilizzare una delle soluzioni per generare l'elenco delle date al volo. per esempio. Ottieni un elenco di date comprese tra due date o Come ottenere l'elenco delle date tra due date in mysql select query
SELECT dates.day AS `Date`, COUNT(DISTINCT ts.user_id) AS user_count
FROM (
SELECT ADDDATE('1970-01-01', t4.i * 10000 + t3.i * 1000 + t2.i * 100 + t1.i * 10 + t0.i) AS day
FROM (SELECT 0 AS i UNION ALL SELECT 1 UNION ALL SELECT 2 UNION ALL SELECT 3 UNION ALL SELECT 4 UNION ALL SELECT 5 UNION ALL SELECT 6 UNION ALL SELECT 7 UNION ALL SELECT 8 UNION ALL SELECT 9) AS t0,
(SELECT 0 AS i UNION ALL SELECT 1 UNION ALL SELECT 2 UNION ALL SELECT 3 UNION ALL SELECT 4 UNION ALL SELECT 5 UNION ALL SELECT 6 UNION ALL SELECT 7 UNION ALL SELECT 8 UNION ALL SELECT 9) AS t1,
(SELECT 0 AS i UNION ALL SELECT 1 UNION ALL SELECT 2 UNION ALL SELECT 3 UNION ALL SELECT 4 UNION ALL SELECT 5 UNION ALL SELECT 6 UNION ALL SELECT 7 UNION ALL SELECT 8 UNION ALL SELECT 9) AS t2,
(SELECT 0 AS i UNION ALL SELECT 1 UNION ALL SELECT 2 UNION ALL SELECT 3 UNION ALL SELECT 4 UNION ALL SELECT 5 UNION ALL SELECT 6 UNION ALL SELECT 7 UNION ALL SELECT 8 UNION ALL SELECT 9) AS t3,
(SELECT 0 AS i UNION ALL SELECT 1 UNION ALL SELECT 2 UNION ALL SELECT 3 UNION ALL SELECT 4 UNION ALL SELECT 5 UNION ALL SELECT 6 UNION ALL SELECT 7 UNION ALL SELECT 8 UNION ALL SELECT 9) AS t4
) AS dates
LEFT OUTER JOIN tracked_search AS ts
ON ts.created = dates.day
WHERE dates.day >= '2017-10-01'
AND dates.day < '2017-11-01'
GROUP BY dates.day;