16

Can anybody tell me how to select data from two tables, without having to use join?

Something like this:

SELECT t1.*, 
       t2.*
  FROM table1 t1, 
       table2 t2

###Clarification I have these two tables, that have the same fields. IE: table1 contains data from 2011 and table2 contains data in 2012. I want to get them all.

###Further clarification: The result set desired can be produced by:

(SELECT tr.full_name, tr.headlines, tr.content, tr.stamp, tr.person_key
 FROM tbl_transactions tr
          JOIN persons p ON p.person_key = tr.person_key
          JOIN teams t ON (pp.membership_id = t.id and pp.membership_type = 'teams')
 WHERE t.team_key = '')
UNION
(SELECT tr.full_name, tr.headlines, tr.content, tr.stamp, tr.person_key
 FROM tbl_transactions_bk_2012 tr
          JOIN persons p ON p.person_key = tr.person_key
          JOIN teams t ON (pp.membership_id = t.id and pp.membership_type = 'teams')
 WHERE t.team_key = ''

and the OP wishes to see if there are alternative ways to speed this up ("I tried to use UNION in between those queries. but query speed took 0.1887 secs. it's kinda slow.")

(@Jetoox: if this is not your intent, please edit your question and clarify).

12

5 Answers 5

29

Just put the join condition in the WHERE clause:

SELECT t1.*, t2.*
FROM table1 t1, table2 t2
WHERE t1.id = t2.t1_id

That is an inner join, though.

UPDATE

Upon looking at your queries: In this particular case, there is no relation between tbl_transactions and tbl_transactions_bk_2012 (i.e. joining these on person_key is meaningless because there is no relationship between the two tables in the way that (say) tbl_transactions and persons are related).

Then, you should use the UNION approach. Trying to join the first query to the second using either JOIN or FROM xx, yy WHERE xx.id=yy.id is meaningless and won't give you the results you need.

By the way, in the future, put your current query/attempt in your post - as you can see it will prevent you from getting answers that aren't appropriate for your question (as my first attempt was).

4
  • both of these tables contains the same example person_key, and when i run the query. mysql say's unknown column person_key.
    – Jetoox
    Feb 27, 2012 at 5:40
  • Please post your exact query that you are using, and also the output of show columns from table1 where Field='person_key' and show columns from table2 where Field='person_key'. If your two tables are related by a common key person_key, use the WHERE condition. If your two tables are entirely unrelated, use the UNION. Feb 27, 2012 at 5:53
  • (SELECT tr.full_name,tr.headlines,tr.content,tr.stamp,tr.person_key FROM tbl_transactions tr JOIN persons p ON p.person_key = tr.person_key JOIN teams t ON (pp.membership_id = t.id and pp.membership_type = 'teams') WHERE t.team_key = '') UNION (SELECT tr.full_name,tr.headlines,tr.content,tr.stamp,tr.person_key FROM tbl_transactions_bk_2012 tr JOIN persons p ON p.person_key = tr.person_key JOIN teams t ON (pp.membership_id = t.id and pp.membership_type = 'teams') WHERE t.team_key = '')
    – Jetoox
    Feb 27, 2012 at 5:55
  • @Jetoox: in this particular case, since there is no relation between tbl_transactions and tbl_transactions_bk_2012 (i.e. joining these on person_key is meaningless because there is no relationship between the two tables in the way that (say) tbl_transactions and persons are related), you should use the UNION approach - trying to join the first query to the second using either JOIN or FROM xx, yy WHERE xx.id=yy.id is meaningless and won't give you the results you need. Feb 27, 2012 at 6:00
12

You want UNION.

(SELECT tr.full_name, tr.headlines, tr.content, tr.stamp, tr.person_key
 FROM tbl_transactions tr
          JOIN persons p ON p.person_key = tr.person_key
          JOIN teams t ON (pp.membership_id = t.id and pp.membership_type = 'teams')
 WHERE t.team_key = '')
UNION
(SELECT tr.full_name, tr.headlines, tr.content, tr.stamp, tr.person_key
 FROM tbl_transactions_bk_2012 tr
          JOIN persons p ON p.person_key = tr.person_key
          JOIN teams t ON (pp.membership_id = t.id and pp.membership_type = 'teams')
 WHERE t.team_key = ''
2
  • Answer from another question about Union: stackoverflow.com/a/409720/1218980 Feb 27, 2012 at 5:38
  • both of these tables contains the same example person_key, and when i run the query. mysql say's unknown column person_key.
    – Jetoox
    Feb 27, 2012 at 5:41
4
select t1.*, t2.* from table1 t1, table2 t2
where t1.fkey = t2.pkey
1
  • both of these tables contains the same example person_key, and when i run the query. mysql say's unknown column person_key.
    – Jetoox
    Feb 27, 2012 at 5:40
2
select t1.* , t2.*
from t1, t2 where t1.id=t2.id;
1
  • both of these tables contains the same example person_key, and when i run the query. mysql say's unknown column person_key.
    – Jetoox
    Feb 27, 2012 at 5:40
0

While using the UNION query, you may also want to add indexes to any columns that you are using to join and filter which will improve performance

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