| List: | General Discussion | « Previous MessageNext Message » | |
| From: | Neil Aggarwal | Date: | December 9 2009 7:42pm |
| Subject: | RE: Join on a where clause. | ||
| View as plain text | |||
Joerg: > A matching column is called an "equijoin" > However, that is not mandatory / the only form. > As long as the problem can be solved using ranges (or multiple ranges) > which do not overlap, the join should solve it. I just learned something. Thanks for the info! Neil -- Neil Aggarwal, (281)846-8957, http://UnmeteredVPS.net Host your MySQL database on a CentOS VPS for $25/mo Unmetered bandwidth = no overage charges, 7 day free trial
| Thread | ||
|---|---|---|
| • Join on a where clause. | Paul Halliday | 9 Dec |
| • RE: Join on a where clause. | Neil Aggarwal | 9 Dec |
| • Re: Join on a where clause. | Joerg Bruehe | 9 Dec |
| • RE: Join on a where clause. | Neil Aggarwal | 9 Dec |
| • Re: Join on a where clause. | Paul Halliday | 10 Dec |
| • Re: Join on a where clause. | Andy Wallace | 10 Dec |
| • Re: Join on a where clause. | Joerg Bruehe | 12 Dec |
| • Re: Join on a where clause. | Shawn Green | 12 Dec |
