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I'm wondering if this is possible in SQL. Say you have two tables A and B, and you do a select on table A and join on table B:

SELECT a.*, b.* FROM TABLE_A a JOIN TABLE_B b USING (some_id);

If table A has columns 'a_id', 'name', and 'some_id', and table B has 'b_id', 'name', and 'some_id', the query will return columns 'a_id', 'name', 'some_id', 'b_id', 'name', 'some_id'. Is there any way to prefix the column names of table B without listing every column individually? The equivalent of this:

SELECT a.*, b.b_id as 'b.b_id', b.name as 'b.name', b.some_id as 'b.some_id'
FROM TABLE_A a JOIN TABLE_B b USING (some_id);

But, as mentioned, without listing every column, so something like:

SELECT a.*, b.* as 'b.*'
FROM TABLE_A a JOIN TABLE_B b USING (some_id);

Basically something to say, "prefix every column returned by b.* with 'something'". Is this possible or am I out of luck?

Thanks in advance for your help!

EDIT: advice on not using SELECT * and so on is valid advice but not relevant in my context, so please stick to the problem at hand -- is it possible to add a prefix (a constant specified in the SQL query) to all the column names of a table in a join?

EDIT: my ultimate goal is to be able to do a SELECT * on two tables with a join, and be able to tell, from the names of the columns I get in my result set, which columns came from table A and which columns came from table B. Again, I don't want to have to list columns individually, I need to be able to do a SELECT *.

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What exactly do you expect the outcome of your query to be? I'm confused – GregD Dec 1 '08 at 3:18
GregD: I want all the column names that come out of b.* to be prefixed with some constant that I specify. For example, instead of 'name' and 'number', I want to specify, say, the 'special_' prefix and get 'special_name' and 'special_number'. But I don't want to do this for each column individually. – Frederic Daoud Dec 1 '08 at 3:31
2  
When I do a quick SELECT to see columns from multiple tables I sometime do SELECT 'AAAAA', A.*, 'BBBBB', B.* FROM TableA AS A JOIN TableB AS B ON A.ID = B.ID so that I at least have a table identifier when scanning along the rows – Kristen Feb 24 '09 at 14:42
Possible duplicate: stackoverflow.com/questions/2595068/… – Andrioid Sep 4 '10 at 7:17

15 Answers

up vote 14 down vote accepted

I see two possible situations here. First, you want to know if there is a SQL standard for this, that you can use in general regardless of the database. No, there is not. Second, you want to know with regard to a specific dbms product. Then you need to identify it. But I imagine the most likely answer is that you'll get back something like "a.id, b.id" since that's how you'd need to identify the columns in your SQL expression. And the easiest way to find out what the default is, is just to submit such a query and see what you get back. If you want to specify what prefix comes before the dot, you can use "SELECT * FROM a AS my_alias", for instance.

share|improve this answer
Indeed, I wanted to know if there is an SQL standard for this, and you've answered my question. Thanks! – Frederic Daoud Dec 1 '08 at 3:45

I totally understand why this is necessary - at least for me it's handy during rapid prototyping when there are a lot of tables necessary to be joined, including many inner joins. As soon as a column name is the same in a second "joinedtable.*" field wild card, the main table's field values are overriden with the joinedtable values. Error prone, frustrating and a violation of DRY when having to manually specify the table fields with aliases over and over...

Here is a PHP (Wordpress) function to achieve this through code generation together with an example of how to use it. In the example, it is used to rapidly generate a custom query that will provide the fields of a related wordpress post that was referenced through a advanced custom fields field.

function prefixed_table_fields_wildcard($table, $alias)
{
    global $wpdb;
    $columns = $wpdb->get_results("SHOW COLUMNS FROM $table", ARRAY_A);

    $field_names = array();
    foreach ($columns as $column)
    {
        $field_names[] = $column["Field"];
    }
    $prefixed = array();
    foreach ($field_names as $field_name)
    {
        $prefixed[] = "`{$alias}`.`{$field_name}` AS `{$alias}.{$field_name}`";
    }

    return implode(", ", $prefixed);
}

function test_prefixed_table_fields_wildcard()
{
    global $wpdb;

    $query = "
    SELECT
        " . prefixed_table_fields_wildcard($wpdb->posts, 'campaigns') . ",
        " . prefixed_table_fields_wildcard($wpdb->posts, 'venues') . "
        FROM $wpdb->posts AS campaigns
    LEFT JOIN $wpdb->postmeta meta1 ON (meta1.meta_key = 'venue' AND campaigns.ID = meta1.post_id)
    LEFT JOIN $wpdb->posts venues ON (venues.post_status = 'publish' AND venues.post_type = 'venue' AND venues.ID = meta1.meta_value)
    WHERE 1
    AND campaigns.post_status = 'publish'
    AND campaigns.post_type = 'campaign'
    LIMIT 1
    ";

    echo "<pre>$query</pre>";

    $posts = $wpdb->get_results($query, OBJECT);

    echo "<pre>";
    print_r($posts);
    echo "</pre>";
}

The output:

SELECT
    `campaigns`.`ID` AS `campaigns.ID`, `campaigns`.`post_author` AS `campaigns.post_author`, `campaigns`.`post_date` AS `campaigns.post_date`, `campaigns`.`post_date_gmt` AS `campaigns.post_date_gmt`, `campaigns`.`post_content` AS `campaigns.post_content`, `campaigns`.`post_title` AS `campaigns.post_title`, `campaigns`.`post_excerpt` AS `campaigns.post_excerpt`, `campaigns`.`post_status` AS `campaigns.post_status`, `campaigns`.`comment_status` AS `campaigns.comment_status`, `campaigns`.`ping_status` AS `campaigns.ping_status`, `campaigns`.`post_password` AS `campaigns.post_password`, `campaigns`.`post_name` AS `campaigns.post_name`, `campaigns`.`to_ping` AS `campaigns.to_ping`, `campaigns`.`pinged` AS `campaigns.pinged`, `campaigns`.`post_modified` AS `campaigns.post_modified`, `campaigns`.`post_modified_gmt` AS `campaigns.post_modified_gmt`, `campaigns`.`post_content_filtered` AS `campaigns.post_content_filtered`, `campaigns`.`post_parent` AS `campaigns.post_parent`, `campaigns`.`guid` AS `campaigns.guid`, `campaigns`.`menu_order` AS `campaigns.menu_order`, `campaigns`.`post_type` AS `campaigns.post_type`, `campaigns`.`post_mime_type` AS `campaigns.post_mime_type`, `campaigns`.`comment_count` AS `campaigns.comment_count`,
    `venues`.`ID` AS `venues.ID`, `venues`.`post_author` AS `venues.post_author`, `venues`.`post_date` AS `venues.post_date`, `venues`.`post_date_gmt` AS `venues.post_date_gmt`, `venues`.`post_content` AS `venues.post_content`, `venues`.`post_title` AS `venues.post_title`, `venues`.`post_excerpt` AS `venues.post_excerpt`, `venues`.`post_status` AS `venues.post_status`, `venues`.`comment_status` AS `venues.comment_status`, `venues`.`ping_status` AS `venues.ping_status`, `venues`.`post_password` AS `venues.post_password`, `venues`.`post_name` AS `venues.post_name`, `venues`.`to_ping` AS `venues.to_ping`, `venues`.`pinged` AS `venues.pinged`, `venues`.`post_modified` AS `venues.post_modified`, `venues`.`post_modified_gmt` AS `venues.post_modified_gmt`, `venues`.`post_content_filtered` AS `venues.post_content_filtered`, `venues`.`post_parent` AS `venues.post_parent`, `venues`.`guid` AS `venues.guid`, `venues`.`menu_order` AS `venues.menu_order`, `venues`.`post_type` AS `venues.post_type`, `venues`.`post_mime_type` AS `venues.post_mime_type`, `venues`.`comment_count` AS `venues.comment_count`
    FROM wp_posts AS campaigns
LEFT JOIN wp_postmeta meta1 ON (meta1.meta_key = 'venue' AND campaigns.ID = meta1.post_id)
LEFT JOIN wp_posts venues ON (venues.post_status = 'publish' AND venues.post_type = 'venue' AND venues.ID = meta1.meta_value)
WHERE 1
AND campaigns.post_status = 'publish'
AND campaigns.post_type = 'campaign'
LIMIT 1

Array
(
    [0] => stdClass Object
        (
            [campaigns.ID] => 33
            [campaigns.post_author] => 2
            [campaigns.post_date] => 2012-01-16 19:19:10
            [campaigns.post_date_gmt] => 2012-01-16 19:19:10
            [campaigns.post_content] => Lorem ipsum
            [campaigns.post_title] => Lorem ipsum
            [campaigns.post_excerpt] => 
            [campaigns.post_status] => publish
            [campaigns.comment_status] => closed
            [campaigns.ping_status] => closed
            [campaigns.post_password] => 
            [campaigns.post_name] => lorem-ipsum
            [campaigns.to_ping] => 
            [campaigns.pinged] => 
            [campaigns.post_modified] => 2012-01-16 21:01:55
            [campaigns.post_modified_gmt] => 2012-01-16 21:01:55
            [campaigns.post_content_filtered] => 
            [campaigns.post_parent] => 0
            [campaigns.guid] => http://example.com/?p=33
            [campaigns.menu_order] => 0
            [campaigns.post_type] => campaign
            [campaigns.post_mime_type] => 
            [campaigns.comment_count] => 0
            [venues.ID] => 84
            [venues.post_author] => 2
            [venues.post_date] => 2012-01-16 20:12:05
            [venues.post_date_gmt] => 2012-01-16 20:12:05
            [venues.post_content] => Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipisicing elit, sed do eiusmod tempor incididunt ut labore et dolore magna aliqua. Ut enim ad minim veniam, quis nostrud exercitation ullamco laboris nisi ut aliquip ex ea commodo consequat. Duis aute irure dolor in reprehenderit in voluptate velit esse cillum dolore eu fugiat nulla pariatur. Excepteur sint occaecat cupidatat non proident, sunt in culpa qui officia deserunt mollit anim id est laborum.
            [venues.post_title] => Lorem ipsum venue
            [venues.post_excerpt] => 
            [venues.post_status] => publish
            [venues.comment_status] => closed
            [venues.ping_status] => closed
            [venues.post_password] => 
            [venues.post_name] => lorem-ipsum-venue
            [venues.to_ping] => 
            [venues.pinged] => 
            [venues.post_modified] => 2012-01-16 20:53:37
            [venues.post_modified_gmt] => 2012-01-16 20:53:37
            [venues.post_content_filtered] => 
            [venues.post_parent] => 0
            [venues.guid] => http://example.com/?p=84
            [venues.menu_order] => 0
            [venues.post_type] => venue
            [venues.post_mime_type] => 
            [venues.comment_count] => 0
        )
)
share|improve this answer

It seems the answer to your question is no, however one hack you can use is to assign a dummy column to separate each new table. This works especially well if you're looping through a result set for a list of columns in a scripting language such as Python or PHP.

SELECT '' as table1_dummy, table1.*, '' as table2_dummy, table2.*, '' as table3_dummy, table3.* FROM table1
JOIN table2 ON table2.table1id = table1.id
JOIN table3 ON table3.table1id = table1.id

I realize this doesn't answer your question exactly, but if you're a coder this is a great way to separate tables with duplicate column names. Hope this helps somebody.

share|improve this answer
+1 - Nice hack. Might come in handy. – acheong87 Aug 27 '12 at 4:51

DIfferent database products will give you different answers; but you're setting yourself up for hurt if you carry this very far. You're far better off choosing the columns you want, and giving them your own aliases so the identity of each column is crystal-clear, and you can tell them apart in the results.

share|improve this answer
Point taken, but my goal here is something very generic, so not being explicit is not a problem. In fact, having to be specific would be a problem. – Frederic Daoud Dec 1 '08 at 3:33
Then you should explain more specifically what the Use Case is. Sounds like it's not a database requirement in a vacuum. – le dorfier Dec 1 '08 at 3:35
Attempted to clarify, above. – Frederic Daoud Dec 1 '08 at 3:39
See further submission below. Can use use dot.notation, which is probably what you'll get be default? – le dorfier Dec 1 '08 at 3:43

The only database I know that does this is SQLite, depending on the settings you configure with PRAGMA full_column_names and PRAGMA short_column_names. See http://www.sqlite.org/pragma.html

Otherwise all I can recommend is to fetch columns in a result set by ordinal position rather than by column name, if it's too much trouble for you to type the names of the columns in your query.

This is a good example of why it's bad practice to use SELECT * -- because eventually you'll have a need to type out all the column names anyway.

I understand the need to support columns that may change name or position, but using wildcards makes that harder, not easier.

share|improve this answer

This is sth I need very much too!!!

Joining 11 tables with total 180 columns... I really need the information where does the column come from. I can't imagine doing aliases for each column. What if the DB schema changes? - which is not my part of work. With the wildcards if won't affect it...

I can't understand why there is no possibility to prefix column names with table name within the SQL standards...

Regards,

share|improve this answer
I agree. In my case, I'm using a SELECT...INTO that places the results in a temp table as part of a larger proc in Sql Server. At the end of the proc, the temp table is dropped. Because of the temporary nature of the table, all objections to using "Select *" don't apply. Some of the suggested hacks won't work for me because the creation of the temp table will fail if there are any columns that do not have unique names. – MylesRip Mar 1 '12 at 19:42
This is not really an answer, but a comment – pixelfreak Sep 22 '12 at 3:03

There is no SQL standard for this.

However With code generation (either on demand as the tables are created or altered or at runtime), you can do this quite easily:

CREATE TABLE [dbo].[stackoverflow_329931_a](
    [id] [int] IDENTITY(1,1) NOT NULL,
    [col2] [nchar](10) NULL,
    [col3] [nchar](10) NULL,
    [col4] [nchar](10) NULL,
 CONSTRAINT [PK_stackoverflow_329931_a] PRIMARY KEY CLUSTERED 
(
    [id] ASC
)WITH (PAD_INDEX  = OFF, STATISTICS_NORECOMPUTE  = OFF, IGNORE_DUP_KEY = OFF, ALLOW_ROW_LOCKS  = ON, ALLOW_PAGE_LOCKS  = ON) ON [PRIMARY]
) ON [PRIMARY]

CREATE TABLE [dbo].[stackoverflow_329931_b](
    [id] [int] IDENTITY(1,1) NOT NULL,
    [col2] [nchar](10) NULL,
    [col3] [nchar](10) NULL,
    [col4] [nchar](10) NULL,
 CONSTRAINT [PK_stackoverflow_329931_b] PRIMARY KEY CLUSTERED 
(
    [id] ASC
)WITH (PAD_INDEX  = OFF, STATISTICS_NORECOMPUTE  = OFF, IGNORE_DUP_KEY = OFF, ALLOW_ROW_LOCKS  = ON, ALLOW_PAGE_LOCKS  = ON) ON [PRIMARY]
) ON [PRIMARY]

DECLARE @table1_name AS varchar(255)
DECLARE @table1_prefix AS varchar(255)
DECLARE @table2_name AS varchar(255)
DECLARE @table2_prefix AS varchar(255)
DECLARE @join_condition AS varchar(255)
SET @table1_name = 'stackoverflow_329931_a'
SET @table1_prefix = 'a_'
SET @table2_name = 'stackoverflow_329931_b'
SET @table2_prefix = 'b_'
SET @join_condition = 'a.[id] = b.[id]'

DECLARE @CRLF AS varchar(2)
SET @CRLF = CHAR(13) + CHAR(10)

DECLARE @a_columnlist AS varchar(MAX)
DECLARE @b_columnlist AS varchar(MAX)
DECLARE @sql AS varchar(MAX)

SELECT @a_columnlist = COALESCE(@a_columnlist + @CRLF + ',', '') + 'a.[' + COLUMN_NAME + '] AS [' + @table1_prefix + COLUMN_NAME + ']'
FROM INFORMATION_SCHEMA.COLUMNS
WHERE TABLE_NAME = @table1_name
ORDER BY ORDINAL_POSITION

SELECT @b_columnlist = COALESCE(@b_columnlist + @CRLF + ',', '') + 'b.[' + COLUMN_NAME + '] AS [' + @table2_prefix + COLUMN_NAME + ']'
FROM INFORMATION_SCHEMA.COLUMNS
WHERE TABLE_NAME = @table2_name
ORDER BY ORDINAL_POSITION

SET @sql = 'SELECT ' + @a_columnlist + '
,' + @b_columnlist + '
FROM [' + @table1_name + '] AS a
INNER JOIN [' + @table2_name + '] AS b
ON (' + @join_condition + ')'

PRINT @sql
-- EXEC (@sql)
share|improve this answer
this would work but the question is rather silly. why not just perform a union or sub-query. Why would you join and still want table prefixes in the column names? – D3vtr0n Dec 1 '08 at 5:58
Cade: thanks for the info, that is interesting. Unfortunately, generating/altering the database is not an option in my case. Devtron: if you are trying to map the information that comes back from a query to different properties of an object, that information becomes very useful. – Frederic Daoud Dec 1 '08 at 8:44
1  
Sometimes column names in different tables are the same, but do not contain the same values. Hence the need to prefix them to distinguish them in views or derived tables (which must have all unique column names). – Cade Roux Dec 1 '08 at 19:33
@Frederic, your code has to live somewhere - this just generates the code. Again, this can be done once during development or dynamically at run time. – Cade Roux Dec 1 '08 at 19:35

I am in kind of the same boat as OP - I have dozens of fields from 3 different tables that I'm joining, some of which have the same name(ie. id, name, etc). I don't want to list each field, so my solution was to alias those fields that shared a name and use select * for those that have a unique name.

For example :

table a : id, name, field1, field2 ...

table b : id, name, field3, field4 ...

select a.id as aID, a.name as aName, a. * , b.id as bID, b.name as bName, b. * .....

When accessing the results I us the aliased names for these fields and ignore the "original" names.

Maybe not the best solution but it works for me....i'm use mysql

share|improve this answer

Or you could use Red Gate SQL Refactor or SQL Prompt, which expands your SELECT * into column lists with a click of the Tab button

so in your case, if you type in SELECT * FROM A JOIN B ... Go to the end of *, Tab button, voila! you'll see SELECT A.column1, A.column2, .... , B.column1, B.column2 FROM A JOIN B

It's not free though

share|improve this answer

Cant do this without aliasing , simply because, how are you going to reference a field in the where clause, if that field exists in the 2 or 3 tables you are joining? It will be unclear for mysql which one you are trying to reference.

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There are two ways I can think of to make this happen in a reusable way. One is to rename all of your columns with a prefix for the table they have come from. I have seen this many times, but I really don't like it. I find that it's redundant, causes a lot of typing, and you can always use aliases when you need to cover the case of a column name having an unclear origin.

The other way, which I would recommend you do in your situation if you are committed to seeing this through, is to create views for each table that alias the table names. Then you join against those views, rather than the tables. That way, you are free to use * if you wish, free to use the original tables with original column names if you wish, and it also makes writing any subsequent queries easier because you have already done the renaming work in the views.

Finally, I am not clear why you need to know which table each of the columns came from. Does this matter? Ultimately what matters is the data they contain. Whether UserID came from the User table or the UserQuestion table doesn't really matter. It matters, of course, when you need to update it, but at that point you should already know your schema well enough to determine that.

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If concerned about schema changes this might work for you: 1. Run a 'DESCRIBE table' query on all tables involved. 2. Use the returned field names to dynamically construct a string of column names prefixed with your chosen alias.

share|improve this answer

There is a direct answer to your question for those who use the MySQL C-API.

Given the SQL:

  SELECT a.*, b.*, c.* FROM table_a a JOIN table_b b USING (x) JOIN table_c c USING (y)

The results from 'mysql_stmt_result_metadata()' gives the definition of your fields from your prepared SQL query into the structure MYSQL_FIELD[]. Each field contains the following data:

  char *name;                 /* Name of column (may be the alias) */
  char *org_name;             /* Original column name, if an alias */
  char *table;                /* Table of column if column was a field */
  char *org_table;            /* Org table name, if table was an alias */
  char *db;                   /* Database for table */
  char *catalog;              /* Catalog for table */
  char *def;                  /* Default value (set by mysql_list_fields) */
  unsigned long length;       /* Width of column (create length) */
  unsigned long max_length;   /* Max width for selected set */
  unsigned int name_length;
  unsigned int org_name_length;
  unsigned int table_length;
  unsigned int org_table_length;
  unsigned int db_length;
  unsigned int catalog_length;
  unsigned int def_length;
  unsigned int flags;         /* Div flags */
  unsigned int decimals;      /* Number of decimals in field */
  unsigned int charsetnr;     /* Character set */
  enum enum_field_types type; /* Type of field. See mysql_com.h for types */

Take notice the fields: catalog,table,org_name

You now know which fields in your SQL belongs to which schema (aka catalog) and table. This is enough to generically identify each field from a multi-table sql query, without having to alias anything.

An actual product SqlYOG is show to use this exact data in such a manor that they are able to independently update each table of a multi-table join, when the PK fields are present.

share|improve this answer

I totally understand your problem about duplicated field names.

I needed that too until I coded my own function to solve it. If you are using PHP you can use it, or code yours in the language you are using for if you have this following facilities.

The trick here is that mysql_field_table() returns the table name and mysql_field_name() the field for each row in the result if it's got with mysql_num_fields() so you can mix them in a new array.

This prefixes all columns ;)

Regards,

function mysql_rows_with_columns($query) {
    $result = mysql_query($query);
    if (!$result) return false; // mysql_error() could be used outside
    $fields = mysql_num_fields($result);
    $rows = array();
    while ($row = mysql_fetch_row($result)) { 
        $newRow = array();
        for ($i=0; $i<$fields; $i++) {
            $table = mysql_field_table($result, $i);
            $name = mysql_field_name($result, $i);
            $newRow[$table . "." . $name] = $row[$i];
        }
        $rows[] = $newRow;
    }
    mysql_free_result($result);
    return $rows;
}
share|improve this answer

select * usually makes for bad code, as new columns tend to get added or order of columns change in tables quite frequently which usually breaks select * in a very subtle ways. So listing out columns is the right solution.

As to how to do your query, not sure about mysql but in sqlserver you could select column names from syscolumns and dynamically build the select clause.

share|improve this answer
Point taken, but in my context, I need something generic and dynamic, so in fact my code will adapt to new columns being added/reordered/etc. I don't want to have to list columns individually. – Frederic Daoud Dec 1 '08 at 3:34
Selecting from syscolumns to dynamically build a select statement is a terrible hack, and I wouldn't recommend it in production. – Juliet Dec 1 '08 at 5:07

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