This is trickier than I first thought, since you want to join the same table multiple times, and the only connection is the updated table itself:
UPDATE table_a a
SET owner1_surname = b1.owner_surname
,owner1_othername = b1.owner_othername
,owner2_surname = b2.owner_surname
,owner2_othername = b2.owner_othername
,owner3_surname = b3.owner_surname
,owner3_othername = b3.owner_othername
FROM table_a x
LEFT JOIN owners_distinct b1 ON b1.b.owner = x.owner1
LEFT JOIN owners_distinct b2 ON b2.b.owner = x.owner2
LEFT JOIN owners_distinct b2 ON b3.b.owner = x.owner3
WHERE x.table_a_id = a.table_a_id
Where table_a_id
is the primary key of table_a
. Normally you don't have to join the table another time, but in this situation you need it for the join before you can link to the updated table.
I use LEFT JOIN
, in order to prevent the whole update for a row from failing if one of the three owners cannot be found in owners_distinct
.
Database design
Are you sure you need all the redundant data in table_a
? The canonical way in a normalized schema would be to only store the foreign keys
(owner1
, owner2
, owner3
), and fetch details of the name on demand with a JOIN
in a SELECT
. Remove all those columns you are updating altogether. Of course, there are always exceptions to the rule ...
No unique key?
This shouldn't happen to begin with. You should add a surrogate primary key like:
ALTER TABLE table_a ADD table_a_id serial PRIMARY KEY;
More about that in the related answer:
Do I need a primary key for my table, which has a UNIQUE (composite 4-columns), one of which can be NULL?
Solution without unique key
Anyway, here is a way to make this update regardless of any unique column:
UPDATE table_a a
SET owner1_surname = b1.owner_surname
,owner1_othername = b1.owner_othername
,owner2_surname = b2.owner_surname
,owner2_othername = b2.owner_othername
,owner3_surname = b3.owner_surname
,owner3_othername = b3.owner_othername
FROM (SELECT DISTINCT owner1, owner2, owner3 FROM table_a) x
LEFT JOIN owners_distinct b1 ON b1.b.owner = x.owner1
LEFT JOIN owners_distinct b2 ON b2.b.owner = x.owner2
LEFT JOIN owners_distinct b2 ON b3.b.owner = x.owner3
WHERE x.owner1 = a.owner1
AND x.owner2 = a.owner2
AND x.owner3 = a.owner3;
The point is: we only need each combination of (owner1, owner2, owner3)
once.