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I have almost more than 10 tables in my database(all tables have same columns). I need to join all them at once. Is there a way? Because I am right now doing manually as shown below (for 2 tables). IN case if I need to do this for more tables, should I do it manually as shown below (for 3 tables)

for 2 tables

select cd.*, mi.[open], aar.[open] from [dbo].[calendar_date] cd
inner join [dbo].[table1] mi on cd.[date] = mi.[date]
inner join [dbo].[table2] aar on cd.[date] = aar.[date]
order by [date] desc

for 3 tables

select cd.*, mi.[open], aar.[open], t3.[open] from [dbo].[calendar_date] cd
inner join [dbo].[table1] mi on cd.[date] = mi.[date]
inner join [dbo].[table2] aar on cd.[date] = aar.[date]
inner join [dbo].[table3] t3 on cd.[date] = t3.[date]
order by [date] desc
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    "I have almost more than 10 tables in my database(all tables have same columns)." -- Yeah, that sounds more like you have a serious design flaw and should have only one table instead... Relational tables aren't spreadsheets.
    – sticky bit
    Apr 17, 2021 at 15:24
  • Do you want to display the contents of all tables as if it were a single table? Then you should use UNION. Or do you only want to display the intersections, i.e. the content for which certain values are the same? Then your approach with an INNER JOIN may be the right one.
    – user15314575
    Apr 17, 2021 at 15:55
  • This does have the smell of an anti-pattern about it. However if it's literally all the tables in the database, or all the tables with the same naming convention, you could construct a dynamic-sql query to build the main query for you, which will always then cope with new table additions.
    – Stu
    Apr 17, 2021 at 19:35

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