Below are the two tables I am working with, along with the columns in the tables:
**## Table 1 ##** Grantee Column w/sample data Grantee ---------- CLAT CLATX1 DJSD DJSDX3 ADKS ADKSX5 DKHS
**## Table 2 ##** Inact_ID Column w/sample data Inact_ID ---------- CLAT DJSD ADKS DKHS
With the following Query:
SELECT DISTINCT A.GRANTEE
FROM TABLE1 A
WHERE
EXISTS(SELECT 1
FROM TABLE2 B
WHERE A.GRANTEE= B.INACT_ID);
These are my results: CLAT DJSD ADKS DKHS
4 Character ID's Returned - Not everything I want(Also want 6 character ID's associated with the 4 character ID's)
In addition to getting those 4 character ID's, some of those 4 character ID's also have another ID with the following naming convention - A02WXn, where X is a constant, and n is a number from 0-9, which is a 6 character ID. I want to be able to include the 6 character ID, if it exists along with the 4 character ID. The 6 character ID's only exist in Table 1.
UPDATE: I think I might be closer to a solution, hope this can clarify more what I want as results.
SELECT A.GRANTEE FROM TABLE1 A INNER JOIN (SELECT B.INACT_ID FROM INACTIVE_USERS B) ON A.GRANTEE LIKE '%' || B.INACT_ID || '%';
(Note - This was done on Postgres, and worked, but I can't get it to run in DB2) Results from Postgres Below:(Desired Results - Both 4 character ID and 6 Character ID if exists) GRANTEE -------- CLAT CLATX1 DJSD DJSDX3 ADKS ADKSX5 DKHS
...WHERE LEFT( A.GRANTEE, 4 ) = B.INACT_ID
?