Specifying a Join in the WHERE Clause
You join two tables by creating a relationship in the WHERE clause between at least one column from one table and at least one column from another. The join creates a temporary composite table where each pair of rows (one from each table) that satisfies the join condition is linked to form a single row.
Element | Description | Restrictions | Syntax |
---|---|---|---|
alias | Temporary alternative name declared in the FROM clause for a table or view | See the Self joins section; FROM Clause | Identifier |
column | Column of a table or view to be joined | Must exist in the table or view | Identifier |
external | External table from which to retrieve data | External table must exist. Must include appropriate qualifiers. | Database Object Name |
synonym, table, view | Name of a synonym, table, or view to be joined in the query | Synonym and the table or view to which it points must exist. Must include appropriate qualifiers. | Database Object Name |
Rows from the tables or views are joined when there is a match between the values of specified columns. When the columns to be joined have the same name, you must qualify each column name with its data source. You can create two-table joins, multiple-table joins, self-joins, and outer joins (HCL OneDB-extension syntax).
Two-table joins
SELECT order_num, lname, fname FROM customer, orders WHERE customer.customer_num = orders.customer_num;
Multi-table joins
A multiple-table join is a join of more than two tables. Its structure is similar to the structure of a two-table join, except that you have a join condition for more than one pair of tables in the WHERE clause. When columns from different tables have the same name, you must qualify the column name with its associated table or table alias, as in table.column.
SELECT DISTINCT company, stock_num, manu_code FROM customer c, orders o, items i WHERE c.customer_num = o.customer_num AND o.order_num = i.order_num;
Self joins
x
and y
are each aliases for the stock table.
SELECT x.stock_num, x.manu_code, y.stock_num, y.manu_code
FROM stock x, stock y WHERE x.unit_price > 2.5 * y.unit_price;
HCL OneDB-extension outer joins
SELECT company, order_num FROM customer c, OUTER orders o WHERE c.customer_num = o.customer_num;
For the syntax of outer joins, see HCL OneDB-Extension Outer Joins.