4

I have two tables, Games and Teams. What should my sql statement look like to make a list of games that pulls in the TeamName that is linked to the TeamID1 and TeamID2 fields? I believe I could use a left join but I'm not sure what to do with two foreign keys that link to one primary key. Thank you very much for any help you could provide.

Games

GameID
TeamID1
TeamID2
Result

Teams

TeamID
TeamName

1
  • 1
    Don't use LEFT (OUTER) JOIN; you expect both teams to be known and the information to be in the team table. Use an (INNER) JOIN. Aug 30, 2009 at 22:08

5 Answers 5

15

I often see folks struggle with the idea of joining a table unto itself or multiple times in the same query (as it were here). Once mastered, it's a great technique to use on tables that have a lot of relationships between rows (such as a list of teams that have to play each other!). As others have pointed out, you need to use two inner joins to accomplish this:

select
    *
from
    games g
    inner join teams t1 on
        g.teamid1 = t1.teamid
    inner join teams t2 on
        g.teamid2 = t2.teamid

So, if your games table looks like this:

GameID    TeamID1    TeamID2
----------------------------
     1          1          3
     2          4          2
     3          2          1

You will get the result set of:

g.GameID    g.TeamID1    g.TeamID2    t1.TeamID    t1.Name    t2.TeamID    t2.Name
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------
       1            1            3            1    Lions              3    Bears
       2            4            2            4    Oh My              2    Tigers
       3            2            1            2    Tigers             1    Lions

Of course, I would alias these columns in the select statement, if I were me, for usability's sake:

select
    g.GameID,
    t1.Name as Team1,
    t2.Name as Team2
from
    ...

This way, columns can be named appropriately, instead of having the t1 and t2 columns share the same names.

Now, to address the confusion about what a left join is. You see, a left join will take all of the rows from the first (or left) table, and then match up any rows on the join condition to the second (or right) table. For any rows from the left table, you will get null in all of the columns on the right table.

Delving into an example, let's say that somebody put in a null for TeamID2 on one of the rows for whatever reason. Let's also say that a team of TeamID 4 used to exist, but doesn't any more.

GameID    TeamID1    TeamID2
----------------------------
     1          1          3
     2          4          2
     3          1       null

Now, let's take a look at what a left join would be in terms of the query:

select
    *
from
    games g
    left join teams t1 on
        g.teamid1 = t1.teamid
    left join teams t2 on
        g.teamid2 = t2.teamid

Logically, this will grab all of our games, and then match them up to the respective teams. However, if a TeamID doesn't exist, we'll get nulls. It will look like so:

g.GameID    g.TeamID1    g.TeamID2    t1.TeamID    t1.Name    t2.TeamID    t2.Name
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------
       1            1            3            1    Lions              3    Bears
       2            4            2         null    null               2    Tigers
       3            1         null            1    Lions           null    null

Therefore, a left join will only be necessary if a team is optional.

In your case, you'll be using an inner join to join a table multiple times. This is a very common practice and is rather useful. It avoids some of the pitfalls of subqueries (especially on MySQL), while allowing you to grab data from the table for intratable comparisons. This is markedly useful when trying to find the order of something, or related rows.

Anyway, I hope this very rambling answer helps out somebody somewhere.

4
  • 1
    Obliged. I try :) Hopefully it helps somebody, eh?
    – Eric
    Aug 30, 2009 at 22:02
  • 3
    It isn't joining the table to itself; it is joining the game table to the team table twice - which is different (even though team gets mentioned twice). Aug 30, 2009 at 22:09
  • @Jonathan: Quite right. Change the semantics to be more accurate.
    – Eric
    Aug 31, 2009 at 4:08
  • Thank you all for your help. That is exactly what I was trying to figure out and it makes sense now!
    – Kevin Davenport
    Sep 3, 2009 at 21:39
4
SELECT *
FROM Games G
INNER JOIN Teams T1
   ON G.TeamID1 = T1.TeamID
INNER JOIN Teams T2
   ON G.TeamID2 = T2.TeamID
1
  • I knew someone would be faster :(
    – Drevak
    Aug 30, 2009 at 21:41
2

I don't think you'll need a left outer join unless one of the two teams in a game is optional. Logically to me it seems that both would be required, so your query would look like this:

SELECT *
FROM Games AS G
INNER JOIN Teams AS T1 ON T1.TeamID = G.TeamID1
INNER JOIN Teams AS T2 ON T2.TeamID = G.TeamID2
1

If TeamID1 and TeamID2 are NOT NULL, then you want to use an INNER JOIN, otherwise you could use a LEFT JOIN.

0

You need to use alias:

SELECT GameID, team1.TeamName, team2.TeamName
FROM Games INNER JOIN teams team1 ON (Games.TeamID1 = team1.TeamID)
           INNER JOIN teams team2 ON (Games.TeamID2 = team2.TeamID)

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