MySQL
- Introduction To MySQL
- MySQL RDBMS
- MySQL SQL
- MySQL SELECT Statement
- MySQL WHERE Clause
- MySQL AND, OR And NOT Operators
- MySQL ORDER BY Keyword
- MySQL INSERT INTO Statement
- MySQL NULL Values
- MySQL UPDATE Statement
- MySQL DELETE Statement
- MySQL LIMIT Clause
- MySQL MIN() And MAX() Functions
- MySQL COUNT(), AVG() And SUM() Functions
- MySQL LIKE Operator
- MySQL Wildcards
- MySQL IN Operator
- MySQL BETWEEN
- MySQL Aliases
- MySQL Joins
- MySQL INNER JOIN Keyword
- MySQL LEFT JOIN Keyword
- MySQL RIGHT JOIN Keyword
- MySQL CROSS JOIN Keyword
- MySQL Self Join
- MySQL UNION Operator
- MySQL GROUP BY Statement
- MySQL HAVING Clause
- MySQL EXISTS Operator
- MySQL ANY And ALL Operators
- MySQL INSERT INTO SELECT Statement
- MySQL CASE Statement
- MySQL NULL Functions
- MySQL Comments
- MySQL Operators
- MySQL CREATE DATABASE Statement
- MySQL DROP DATABASE Statement
- MySQL CREATE TABLE Statement
- MySQL DROP TABLE Statement
- MySQL ALTER TABLE Statement
- MySQL Constraints
- MySQL NOT NULL Constraint
- MySQL UNIQUE Constraint
- MySQL PRIMARY KEY Constraint
- MySQL FOREIGN KEY Constraint
- MySQL CHECK Constraint
- MySQL DEFAULT Constraint
- MySQL CREATE INDEX Statement
- MySQL AUTO INCREMENT Field
- MySQL Working With Dates
- MySQL Views
- MySQL Data Types
- MySQL Functions
MySQL Joins
MySQL Joining Tables
A JOIN clause is used to combine rows from two or more tables, based on a related column between them.
Let's look at a selection from the "Orders" table:
OrderID | CustomerID | OrderDate |
---|---|---|
10308 | 2 | 1996-09-18 |
10309 | 37 | 1996-09-19 |
10310 | 77 | 1996-09-20 |
Then, look at a selection from the "Customers" table:
CustomerID | CustomerName | ContactName | Country |
---|---|---|---|
1 | Alfreds Futterkiste | Maria Anders | Germany |
2 | Ana Trujillo Emparedados y helados | Ana Trujillo | Mexico |
3 | Antonio Moreno Taquería | Antonio Moreno | Mexico |
Notice that the "CustomerID" column in the "Orders" table refers to the "CustomerID" in the "Customers" table. The relationship between the two tables above is the "CustomerID" column.
Then, we can create the following SQL statement (that contains an INNER JOIN), that selects records that have matching values in both tables:
SELECT Orders.OrderID, Customers.CustomerName, Orders.OrderDate
FROM Orders
INNER JOIN Customers ON Orders.CustomerID=Customers.CustomerID;
FROM Orders
INNER JOIN Customers ON Orders.CustomerID=Customers.CustomerID;
and it will produce something like this:
OrderID | CustomerName | OrderDate |
---|---|---|
10308 | Ana Trujillo Emparedados y helados | 9/18/1996 |
10365 | Antonio Moreno Taquería | 11/27/1996 |
10383 | Around the Horn | 12/16/1996 |
10355 | Around the Horn | 11/15/1996 |
10278 | Berglunds snabbköp | 8/12/1996 |
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Supported Types Of Joins In MySQL
INNER JOIN: Returns records that have matching values in both tables
LEFT JOIN: Returns all records from the left table, and the matched records from the right table
RIGHT JOIN: Returns all records from the right table, and the matched records from the left table
CROSS JOIN: Returns all records from both tables
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