SQL Querying Multiple Tables

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Revision as of 21:29, 23 May 2024 by Ovidiu (talk | contribs) (→‎Join)
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External

Internal

Overview

More than one table can be used in a FROM query clause, and when that happens, it is said that the query performs a join.

Examples

All examples provided in this article are based on three tables (person, address and country), with the following schema:

person 

Column     | Type                                                  id | name             | company_id
-----------+---------                                           ------+------------------+-------------
id         | integer  # primary key                                1  | Alice            | 10
name       | text                                                  2  | Bob              | 20 
company_id | integer  # foreign key that references company(id)    3  | Charlie          | 30 

company

Column     | Type                                                  id | name             | city_id
-----------+---------                                           ------+------------------+-------------
id         | integer # primary key                                10  | Moonphone        | 100
name       | text                                                 20  | Vortextime       | 200  
city_id    | integer # foreign key that references city(id)       30  | Bluestone        | 300 

city

Column     | Type                                                  id | name             
-----------+---------                                           ------+------------------
id         | integer # primary key                                100 | San Francisco
name       | text                                                 200 | New York  
                                                                  300 | Chicago

Join

If more than one table appears in the FROM clause, then the conditions used to link the tables must be included as well. This is the ANSI-approved method of joining multiple tables, and it is the most portable across various database servers. The mechanism of linking two or more tables is referred to as a join. The syntax requires that all the tables are specified in the FROM clause. One of the table does not need any qualifiers, then for each additional table, an:

JOIN <table_name> ON <join_condition>

is added as in the following example:

 FROM <table_one>
   JOIN <table_two> ON <join_condition>
   JOIN <table_three> ON <join_condition>
   ...

Note that a JOIN keyword without any qualifier defaults to an inner join.

The SQL syntax permits to alias each of the tables that participate in join, so you can identify which tables you are referring to when you reference columns in the SELECT clause. For permanent, temporary and virtual tables aliasing is optional, as their original names can be used to reference columns. However for derived tables, the alias is useful:

 FROM <table_one> AS table_one_alias
   JOIN <table_two> AS table_two_alias ON <join_condition>
   JOIN <table_three> AS table_three_aliasON <join_condition>
   ...


To join two tables:

 SELECT person.name AS name, company.name AS company
 FROM person 
   JOIN company ON person.company_id = company.id

  name   |  company
---------+------------
 Alice   | Moonphone
 Bob     | Vortextime
 Charlie | Bluestone

To join three tables:

 SELECT person.name AS name, company.name AS company, city.name AS city 
 FROM person
   JOIN company ON person.company_id = company.id 
   JOIN city ON company.city_id = city.id;

  name   |  company   |     city
---------+------------+---------------
 Alice   | Moonphone  | San Francisco
 Bob     | Vortextime | New York
 Charlie | Bluestone  | Chicago

Foreign key

Join Types

Inner Join

Code JOIN is specified without any qualifier, it implies an inner join. For clarity, INNER can be specified:

 SELECT ...
 FROM ...
   INNER JOIN sometable ON ...