views:

1024

answers:

3

I have a table that uses 3 foreign keys into other tables. When I perform a left join, I get duplicate columns. MySQL says that the USING syntax will reduce the duplicate columns, but there aren't examples for multiple keys.

Given:

mysql> describe recipes;
+------------------+------------------+------+-----+---------+-------+
| Field            | Type             | Null | Key | Default | Extra |
+------------------+------------------+------+-----+---------+-------+
| ID_Recipe        | int(11)          | NO   | PRI | NULL    |       |
| Recipe_Title     | char(64)         | NO   |     | NULL    |       |
| Difficulty       | int(10) unsigned | NO   |     | NULL    |       |
| Elegance         | int(10) unsigned | NO   |     | NULL    |       |
| Quality          | int(10) unsigned | NO   |     | NULL    |       |
| Kitchen_Hours    | int(10) unsigned | NO   |     | NULL    |       |
| Kitchen_Minutes  | int(10) unsigned | NO   |     | NULL    |       |
| Total_Hours      | int(10) unsigned | NO   |     | NULL    |       |
| Total_Minutes    | int(10) unsigned | NO   |     | NULL    |       |
| Serving_Quantity | int(10) unsigned | NO   |     | NULL    |       |
| Description      | varchar(128)     | NO   |     | NULL    |       |
| ID_Prep_Text     | int(11)          | YES  |     | NULL    |       |
| ID_Picture       | int(11)          | YES  |     | NULL    |       |
| Category         | int(10) unsigned | NO   |     | NULL    |       |
| ID_Reference     | int(11)          | YES  |     | NULL    |       |
+------------------+------------------+------+-----+---------+-------+
15 rows in set (0.06 sec)

mysql> describe recipe_prep_texts;
+------------------+---------------+------+-----+---------+-------+
| Field            | Type          | Null | Key | Default | Extra |
+------------------+---------------+------+-----+---------+-------+
| ID_Prep_Text     | int(11)       | NO   | PRI | NULL    |       |
| Preparation_Text | varchar(2048) | NO   |     | NULL    |       |
+------------------+---------------+------+-----+---------+-------+
2 rows in set (0.02 sec)

mysql> describe recipe_prep_texts;
+------------------+---------------+------+-----+---------+-------+
| Field            | Type          | Null | Key | Default | Extra |
+------------------+---------------+------+-----+---------+-------+
| ID_Prep_Text     | int(11)       | NO   | PRI | NULL    |       |
| Preparation_Text | varchar(2048) | NO   |     | NULL    |       |
+------------------+---------------+------+-----+---------+-------+
2 rows in set (0.02 sec)

mysql> describe mp_references;
+--------------+---------+------+-----+---------+-------+
| Field        | Type    | Null | Key | Default | Extra |
+--------------+---------+------+-----+---------+-------+
| ID_Reference | int(11) | NO   | PRI | NULL    |       |
| ID_Title     | int(11) | YES  |     | NULL    |       |
| ID_Category  | int(11) | YES  |     | NULL    |       |
+--------------+---------+------+-----+---------+-------+
3 rows in set (0.00 sec)

My query statement:

SELECT  *
 FROM  Recipes
LEFT JOIN (Recipe_Prep_Texts, Recipe_Pictures, mp_References)
ON (
 Recipe_Prep_Texts.ID_Prep_Text = Recipes.ID_Prep_Text AND
 Recipe_Pictures.ID_Picture = Recipes.ID_Picture AND
 mp_References.ID_Reference = Recipes.ID_Reference
);

My objective is to get one row of all the columns from the join without duplicate columns. I'm using MySQL C++ Connector to send the SQL statements and retrieve result sets. I believe that the C++ Connector is having issues with duplicate column names.

So what is the SQL statement syntax that I should use?

Reference to MySQL JOIN syntax

+1  A: 

You are selecting * from the combined resulting table. Limit that * to whatever columns you want to keep.

tgandrews
As you look in the post data from MySQL, I have a lot of columns. This may be a pain if I have to list all the columns except the duplicates. Is there an SQL qualifier that will let me list all columns except those I specify?
Thomas Matthews
Not that I know of.
tgandrews
+1  A: 

Since it looks like most of the tables you are joining on have a few columns except for the first one, how about:

   SELECT Recipes.*,
          Recipe_Prep_Texts.Preparation_Text,
          Recipe_Pictures.Foo, -- describe is missing in OP
          mp_References.ID_Title,
          mp_References.ID_Category

     FROM Recipes
LEFT JOIN (Recipe_Prep_Texts, Recipe_Pictures, mp_References)
       ON (
           Recipe_Prep_Texts.ID_Prep_Text = Recipes.ID_Prep_Text AND
           Recipe_Pictures.ID_Picture = Recipes.ID_Picture AND
           mp_References.ID_Reference = Recipes.ID_Reference
          );

I can't tell you how many times I wished I had

SELECT (* - foo) FROM table

especially in cases where foo is some huge field like a BLOB and I just want to see everything else without breaking the formatting.

Rob Van Dam
Although enumerating each valid column is possible, I just think it is a lot of work for my program and also adds to the length of the SQL statement that gets sent to the database. See Danny's answer below.
Thomas Matthews
+1  A: 

I believe the following should work:

SELECT  *
 FROM  Recipes
LEFT JOIN Recipe_Prep_Texts USING (ID_Prep_Text)
LEFT JOIN Recipe_Pictures USING (ID_Picture)
LEFT JOIN mp_References USING (ID_Reference)
Danny Shisler
This works, except when the table doesn't exist. So I put in checks for that. Also, this assumes that the tables have unique column names except for the foreign key fields. Luckily, that is what I have. **Many thanks!**
Thomas Matthews