Join
Adds columns from another table, matching rows based on a condition.
join side:{inner|left|right|full} table (condition)
Parameters
side
specifies which rows to include, defaulting toinner
.- table - a reference to a relation, possibly including an alias, e.g.
a=artists
- condition - a boolean condition
- If the condition evaluates to true for a given row, the row will be joined
- If name is the same from both tables, it can be expressed with only
(==col)
.
Examples
PRQL
from employees
join side:left positions (employees.id==positions.employee_id)
SQL
SELECT
employees.*,
positions.*
FROM
employees
LEFT JOIN positions ON employees.id = positions.employee_id
PRQL
from employees
join side:left p=positions (employees.id==p.employee_id)
SQL
SELECT
employees.*,
p.*
FROM
employees
LEFT JOIN positions AS p ON employees.id = p.employee_id
PRQL
from tracks
join side:left artists (
# This adds a `country` condition, as an alternative to filtering
artists.id==tracks.artist_id && artists.country=='UK'
)
SQL
SELECT
tracks.*,
artists.*
FROM
tracks
LEFT JOIN artists ON artists.id = tracks.artist_id
AND artists.country = 'UK'
this & that can be used to refer to the current & other table respectively:
PRQL
from tracks
join side:inner artists (
this.id==that.artist_id
)
SQL
SELECT
tracks.*,
artists.*
FROM
tracks
JOIN artists ON tracks.id = artists.artist_id
Self equality operator
If the join conditions are of form left.x == right.x
, we can use “self equality operator”:
PRQL
from employees
join positions (==emp_no)
SQL
SELECT
employees.*,
positions.*
FROM
employees
JOIN positions ON employees.emp_no = positions.emp_no