Difference between revisions of "Oracle:Joining tables"

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|7499||ALLEN||SALES||.....||30||30||SALES||......
 
|7499||ALLEN||SALES||.....||30||30||SALES||......
 
|-
 
|-
| join these | somehow
+
!colspan="4" |&npsb;
 +
!colspan="2" | join using these columns
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!colspan="2" |&npsb;
 
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|}
  

Revision as of 17:27, 2 March 2016

Joining Tables Introduction

Sometimes information needs to be retrieved from more than one table. The relationships between rows in one table and rows in another are established by the values in certain corresponding columns (foreign key).

For example:

EMP DEPT
EMPNO ENAME JOB ..... DEPTNO DEPTNO DNAME ......
7499 ALLEN SALES ..... 30 30 SALES ......
&npsb; join using these columns &npsb;

JOIN ATTRIBUTES

The table must have matching values in the Join attributes to enable a join to take place. If there are no matching values, the tables will not join! For example, if 30 was missing from the DEPT table, then the employees from department 30 would not appear in any output that joins tables DEPT and EMP together. (A consequence of violating referential integrity!)

Basic SQL Structure For Joining Tables

The format when joining tables is:

SELECT some columns FROM two or more tables WHERE table1.col1 = table2.col2 [ AND table3.col3 = table4.col4 [AND ....]]

Note, two, or more tables can be joined in a SQL statement, but each join condition specifies the link between two tables only. If, for example, three tables appear in the FROM clause, there should normally be two join conditions.

Join Operators

= Equal <> Not equal > Greater than >= Greater than, or equal to < Less than <= Less than, or equal to BETWEEN lower-value AND higher-value A value between lower and higher LIKE Pattern matching

Example Join Queries

To find ALLEN's location:

SELECT  ENAME,  LOC  
FROM  EMP  E,  DEPT  D 
WHERE  ENAME  =  'ALLEN' AND E.DEPTNO = D.DEPTNO;