Only with something horrific, like
select * from user
where (code + userType) in ( select code + userType from userType )
Then you have to manage nulls and concatenating numbers rather than adding them, and casting, and a code of 12 and a usertype of 3 vs a code of 1 and a usertype of 23, and...
..which means you start heading into perhaps something like:
--if your SQLS supports CONCAT
select * from user
where CONCAT(code, CHAR(9), userType) in ( select CONCAT(code, CHAR(9), userType) from ... )
--if no concat
select * from user
where COALESCE(code, 'no code') + CHAR(9) + userType in (
select COALESCE(code, 'no code') + CHAR(9) + userType from ...
)
CONCAT will do a string concatenation of most things, and won't zip the whole output to NULL if one element is NULL. If you don't have CONCAT then you'll string concat using +
but anything that might be null will need a COALESCE/ISNULL around it.. And in either case you'll need something like CHAR(9) (a tab) between the fields to prevent them mixing.. The thing between the fields should be southing that is not naturally present in the data..
Tis a shame SQLS doesn't support this, that Oracle does:
where (code, userType) in ( select code, userType from userType )
but it's probably not worth switching DB for; I'd use EXISTS or a JOIN to achieve a multi column filter
So there ya go: a solution that doesn't use joins or exists.. and a bunch of reasons why you shouldn't use it ;)