The tables below are an example table structure.
The query I am trying to write is something like:
SELECT * FROM jobs LEFT JOIN assigned ON jobs.id = assigned.job_id;
However, as you can see the left join will product multiple matches in the case of job 100, but the above query will only return one match.
Is it possible to concatenate the results into a comma separated string for the left join?
If possible, a step further would be, is it possible to replace the assigned.user_id with the users.name column in the concatenated comma separated string.
users
╔═══╦════════════╦═════════════╗
║ ║ id ║ name ║
╠═══╬════════════╬═════════════╣
║ 1 ║ 1 ║ Matt ║
║ 2 ║ 2 ║ Phil ║
║ 3 ║ 3 ║ Chris ║
╚═══╩════════════╩═════════════╝
jobs
╔═══╦════════════╦═════════════╗
║ ║ id ║ name ║
╠═══╬════════════╬═════════════╣
║ 1 ║ 100 ║ Do this ║
║ 2 ║ 101 ║ Do that ║
║ 3 ║ 102 ║ And this ║
╚═══╩════════════╩═════════════╝
assigned
╔═══╦════════════╦═════════════╗
║ ║ user_id ║ job_id ║
╠═══╬════════════╬═════════════╣
║ 1 ║ 1 ║ 100 ║
║ 2 ║ 2 ║ 100 ║
║ 3 ║ 1 ║ 101 ║
╚═══╩════════════╩═════════════╝