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Home/ Questions/Q 570597
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 13, 20262026-05-13T13:25:07+00:00 2026-05-13T13:25:07+00:00

I have a query like this: SELECT `*` FROM (`threads` t, `members` m) WHERE

  • 0

I have a query like this:

SELECT `*` 
  FROM (`threads` t, `members` m) 
 WHERE `m`.`id` = t.author 
   AND `t`.`type` = '0' 
   AND `t`.`category` = '1'

And basically what happens is that there is an ID field in both tables (members and threads) so what’s happening is that the results array is getting messed up. IE: There is only one ID field which is being populated from the members table.

What I need to do is make the results with a prefix infront of their key name so I can distinguish between the two:
IE: Add ‘t.’ to all thread fields and ‘m.’ to all members fields.

So results should be like: m.id = x, t.id = y
Instead, results at the moment are like: id = x (the id field from the thread table is completely overwritten by the one from the members table)

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1 Answer

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-13T13:25:07+00:00Added an answer on May 13, 2026 at 1:25 pm

    Use:

    SELECT m.id AS x,
           t.id 'y' 
      FROM MEMBERS m
      JOIN THREADS t ON t.id = m.author
                    AND t.type = '0'
                    AND t.category = '1'
    

    Column aliases are defined on a column by column basis – you can’t use wildcards/etc.
    You can use the AS keyword, or simply enclose the column alias within single quotes if the column name doesn’t contain special characters – use double quotes if it does. You can combine single/double quote usage with the AS keyword.

    Do I have to List all the Columns?


    Yes, you have to list all the columns unless you like duplicate columns because you choose to use m.* or t.*. There is no convention in SQL that supports what you ask. SELECT * is not an ideal practice – read this answer for details beyond this situation why.

    Addendum


    I took the liberty of rewriting your query to use ANSI-92 JOIN syntax – your example used ANSI-89. There’s no performance difference.

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