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I use MySQL with MyISAM engine. Lets say I have the following 2 database tables:

TableX

ID, Person1ID, Person2ID

Person

ID, Name

How should my query look like since I have 2 foreign keys that points to the same table? I've been trying to join tables but out of luck...

I want to select

ID, Name, Name
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2 Answers 2

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You would need to join Person table twice in your case, here is an example:

SELECT j.ID, 
       p.Name AS `Person 1 Name`,
       p2.Name AS `Person 2 Name`
  FROM TableX j
  JOIN Person p
    ON p.ID = j.Person1ID
  JOIN Person p2
    ON p2.ID = j.Person2ID
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  • +1. This is a good example of a query that returns the specified result. (It might be good to note that if a matching row is not found in the Person table, the row from TableX would not be returned; implementing an "outer" join would allow the row from TableX to be returned, along with a NULL value for Name when a matching row is not found.) Sep 2, 2014 at 22:20
  • Slight better worded would be it will return all rows that are present in the table Person for both id's referenced, if any is missing it will not yield any results for that specific row.
    – Prix
    Sep 2, 2014 at 22:22
  • Thank you guys. My mistake was that I didnt use Alias... feel stupid now... Thank you all. Sep 2, 2014 at 22:31
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Here's an example of a query that performs JOIN operations to retrieve the related rows from the Person table:

SELECT t.ID
     , t.Person1ID
     , t.Person2ID
     , p1.ID          AS `p1_ID`
     , p1.Name        AS `p1_Name`
     , p2.ID          AS `p2_ID`
     , p2.Name        AS `p2_Name`
 FROM TableX t
 LEFT
 JOIN Person p1 
   ON p1.ID = t.Person1ID
 LEFT
 JOIN Person p2
   ON p2.ID = t.Person2ID
ORDER BY t.ID

If you want to exclude rows where there is no matching row in the Person table, you can remove the LEFT keyword to replace the "outer" join operation with an "inner" join.

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