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I've got a user table and a complaint table.

The complaint table has the following structure:

[opened_by]   [complaint_text]   [closed_by]
 (user_id)         (text)         (user_id)
 (user_id)         (text)         (user_id)
 (user_id)         (text)         (user_id)

All users, both the complainers and complaint-resolvers are located in table user.

How do I write a query to show the username for both columns?

This gives me one:

SELECT user.username, complaint.complaint_text
FROM complaint
LEFT JOIN user ON user.user_id=complaint.opened_by

but I don't know how to write it so both _by columns show usernames rather than IDs.

4 Answers 4

50
SELECT 
     complaint.complaint_text, 
     A.username, 
     B.username
FROM 
     complaint 
     LEFT JOIN user A ON A.user_id=complaint.opened_by 
     LEFT JOIN user B ON B.user_id=complaint.closed_by
3
  • 1
    I prefer this to sub-queries where possible, easily readable and efficient. Aug 22, 2013 at 16:14
  • 1
    Wouldn't this provide cartesian product of complaint x A x B ? Nov 28, 2017 at 16:24
  • 1
    @NeverEndingQueue - no it won't because each of the JOINs have a condition Nov 28, 2017 at 22:42
4

I prefer sub-queries as I find them easier to understand...

SELECT (SELECT name
            FROM user
            WHERE user_id = opened_by) AS opener,
       (SELECT name
            FROM user
            WHERE user_id = closed_by) AS closer,
       complaint_text
    FROM complaint;

Sub-queries are usually rewritten by the query optimiser, if you have any performance concerns.

1

Use this query:

SELECT opener.username as opened_by, complaint.complaint_text, closer.username as closed_by
FROM complaint
LEFT JOIN user as opener ON opener.user_id=complaint.opened_by
LEFT JOIN user as closer ON closer.user_id=complaint.closed_by
0
SELECT user1.username AS opened_by_username, complaint.complaint_text, user2.username AS closed_by_username
FROM user AS user1, complaint, user as user2
WHERE user1.user_id = complaint.opened_by
AND user2.user_id = complaint.closed_by

Join it again using an alias (thats what the user as user2 stuff is about)

0

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