1

I have a table "user" like this :

| uid | username |
|  1  | Jack     |
|  2  | John     |
|  3  | Robert   |

Using my request :

SELECT u1.username, u2.username FROM user u1 JOIN user u2

Using this request, I get a table like this :

| uid | username | uid | username |
|  1  | Jack     |  1  | Jack     |
|  1  | Jack     |  2  | John     |
|  1  | Jack     |  3  | Robert   |
|  2  | John     |  1  | Jack     |
|  2  | John     |  2  | John     |
|  2  | John     |  3  | Robert   |
|  3  | Robert   |  1  | Jack     |
|  3  | Robert   |  2  | John     |
|  3  | Robert   |  3  | Robert   |

How can I remove one of these duets?

|  1  | Jack     |  2  | John     |
|  2  | John     |  1  | Jack     |
4
  • So your goal is to get a list pairing every user once with every other user? Jun 7, 2014 at 12:39
  • All of them are paired, so essentially you want to select nothing?
    – Strawberry
    Jun 7, 2014 at 12:40
  • If I understand, your ultimate result would be only 3 rows: (1,2),(1,3),(2,3), unless you also wanted to keep (1,1),(2,2),(3,3) Jun 7, 2014 at 12:43
  • Yes, this is what I was looking for. (1,1)(1,2)(1,3)(2,2)(2,3)(3,3)
    – d3cima
    Jun 8, 2014 at 10:04

1 Answer 1

3

You want all combinations of User table 1 with User table 2. I believe this would accomplish this:

SELECT u1.id, u1.name, u2.id u2.name
FROM User u1
INNER JOIN User u2
WHERE u1.id >= u2.id

This would give the following result:

| uid | username | uid | username |
|  1  | Jack     |  1  | Jack     |
|  2  | John     |  1  | Jack     |
|  2  | John     |  2  | John     |
|  3  | Robert   |  1  | Jack     |
|  3  | Robert   |  2  | John     |
|  3  | Robert   |  3  | Robert   |
1
  • Thank you, that's what I was looking for. How easy it is, and I didn't think about it. :-)
    – d3cima
    Jun 7, 2014 at 14:26

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