SQL SELECT from multiple tables
you can do this:
SELECT Table1.*,Table2.xyz, Table2.abc,... From...
where you get all columns from one table using "*" and then just the columns from the other table you need, so there is no clash.
You could also use column aliases, where you "rename" a column:
SELECT Table1.A AS T1_A,Table2.A AS T2_A,... From...
your result set would be of columns T1_A and T2_A
Yes, you can. The easiest way is with pdo, although there's at least a few other extensions which are capable of it.
pdo
Set the attribute on the PDO object, not the PDOStatment.
$PDO->setAttribute(PDO::ATTR_FETCH_TABLE_NAMES, true);
That's it. Then you get associative array keys like $row['myTable.myColumn']
. It works if you fetch an object too (eg via PDO::FETCH_OBJECT
) so beware, because you need to access the properties like $obj->{'myTable.myColumn'}
*The manual says the PDO::ATTR_FETCH_TABLE_NAMES
attribute is only supported by certain drivers. If the above doesn't work, this might work instead.
$pdoStatement->setFetchMode(PDO::FETCH_NUM);
$pdoStatement->execute();
//build our associative array keys
$qualifiedColumnNames = array();
for ($i = 0; $i < $pdoStatement->columnCount(); $i++) {
$columnMeta = $pdoStatement->getColumnMeta($i);
$qualifiedColumnNames[] = "$columnMeta[table].$columnMeta[name]";
}
//fetch results and combine with keys
while ($row = $pdoStatement->fetch()) {
$qualifiedRow = array_combine($qualifiedColumnNames, $row);
print_r($qualifiedRow);
}
Same basic pattern is used for other database extensions
mysql
$res = mysql_query($sql);
//build our associative array keys
$qualifiedColumnNames = array();
for ($i = 0; $i < mysql_num_fields($res); $i++) {
$columnMeta = mysql_fetch_field($res, $i);
$qualifiedColumnNames[] = "$columnMeta[table].$columnMeta[name]";
}
//fetch results and combine with keys
while ($row = mysql_fetch_row($res)) {
$qualifiedRow = array_combine($qualifiedColumnNames, $row);
print_r($qualifiedRow);
}
mysqli
$res = $mysqli->query($sql);
//build our associative array keys
$qualifiedColumnNames = array();
foreach ($res->fetch_fields() as $columnMeta) {
$qualifiedColumnNames[] = "{$columnMeta->table}.{$columnMeta->name}";
}
//fetch results and combine with keys
while ($row = $res->fetch_row()) {
$qualifiedRow = array_combine($qualifiedColumnNames, $row);
print_r($qualifiedRow);
}
This should also work with table aliases (tested in php 7.1) - the qualified column name will use the table alias.
Shamelessly repackaged from @goat:
// Workaround for setAttribute(PDO::ATTR_FETCH_TABLE_NAMES, true);
function pdoStatementExecuteAndFetchObjWithTableNames(PDOStatement $statement)
{
$statement->setFetchMode(PDO::FETCH_NUM);
$statement->execute();
//build our associative array keys
$qualifiedColumnNames = array();
for ($i = 0; $i < $statement->columnCount(); $i++) {
$columnMeta = $statement->getColumnMeta($i);
$qualifiedColumnNames[] = "$columnMeta[table].$columnMeta[name]";
}
//fetch results and combine with keys
while ($row = $statement->fetch()) {
$qualifiedRow = array_combine($qualifiedColumnNames, $row);
yield (object) $qualifiedRow;
}
}
NOTE: if you use:
SELECT 1 FROM my_table AS my_table_alias
then you will get my_table
. I would have hoped for my_table_alias
. I got this result with PHP 5.6 and sqlite driver.
Unfortunately, no; there is no SQL syntax for ensuring that column names are unique.
If you truly don't know the names of the columns and must use SELECT *
, your only real option would be to revert to some very ugly looking dynamic SQL that could inspect the structure of the tables and generate a query that would select them all explicitly with a table-name prefix.
I don't know which RDBMS you're using, but something like this should work on SQL Server:
declare @columns table (idx int identity(1,1), tablename varchar(100), columnname varchar(100))
insert into @columns (tablename, columnname)
select tablename, columnname
from INFORMATION_SCHEMA.COLUMNS
where tablename in ('table_1', 'table_2')
declare @sql nvarchar(4000)
declare @i int
declare @cnt in
declare @col varchar(100)
declare @table varchar(100)
select @i = 0, @cnt = max(idx), @sql = '' from @columns
while @i < @cnt
begin
select @i = @i + 1
select @col = columnname, @table = tablename from @columns where idx = @i
if len(@sql) > 0
select @sql = @sql + ', '
select @sql = @sql + '[' + @table + '].[' + @col + '] as [' + @table + '_' + @col + ']'
end
select @sql = 'select ' + @sql + ' from table_1, table_2'
exec sp_executesql @sql