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 join
s 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 null
s. 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.