I have the following code
SELECT *
FROM
customer
INNER JOIN (
SELECT
customerid, newspapername, enddate, n.publishedby
FROM
newspapersubscription ns,
newspaper n
WHERE
publishedby IN (
SELECT publishedby
FROM newspaper
WHERE ns.newspapername = n.NewspaperName
)
UNION
SELECT
customerid, Magazinename, enddate, m.publishedby
FROM
magazinesubscription ms,
magazine m
WHERE
publishedby IN (
SELECT publishedby
FROM magazine
WHERE ms.Magazinename = m.MagazineName
)
) ON
customer.customerid = customerid
ORDER BY
customer.customerid;
The customer table has the following:
customerid | customername | customersaddress
This query returns the following result:
customerid | customername | customersaddress | customerid | newspapername | enddate| publishedby
What I actually want is
customerid | customername | customersaddress | newspapername | magazinename | enddate| publishedby
Here, the newspapername field should be blank if the magazinename is present and vice versa. Also, the duplicate field of customerid from the union operations should not be present, while in my result, the value of both the newspapername and the magazinename are put under newspapername title.
How can I do that?
JOIN
syntax in the ANSI-92 SQL Standard (more than 20 years ago) and its use is discouraged