My question is this: Is it possible to output multiple rows when joining from the same table?
With this code for example, I would like it to output 2 rows, one for each table. Instead, what it does is gives me 1 row with all of the data.
SELECT t1.*, t2.*
FROM table t1
JOIN table t2
ON t2.id = t1.oldId
WHERE t1.id = '1'
UPDATE
Well the problem that I have with the UNION/UNION ALL is this: I don’t know what the t1.oldId value is equal to. All I know is the id for t1. I am trying to avoid using 2 queries so is there a way I could do something like this:
SELECT t1.*
FROM table t1
WHERE t1.id = '1'
UNION
SELECT t2.*
FROM table t2
WHERE t2.id = t1.oldId
SAMPLE DATA
messages_users
id message_id user_id box thread_id latest_id
--------------------------------------------------------
8 1 1 1 NULL NULL
9 2 1 2 NULL 16
10 2 65 1 NULL 15
11 3 65 2 2 NULL
12 3 1 1 2 NULL
13 4 1 2 2 NULL
14 4 65 1 2 NULL
15 5 65 2 2 NULL
16 6 1 1 2 NULL
Query:
SELECT mu.id FROM messages_users mu
JOIN messages_users mu2 ON mu2.latest_id IS NOT NULL
WHERE mu.user_id = '1' AND mu2.user_id = '1' AND ((mu.box = '1'
AND mu.thread_id IS NULL AND mu.latest_id IS NULL) OR mu.id = mu2.latest_id)
This query fixes my problem. But it seems the answer to my question is to not use a JOIN but a UNION.
You mean one row for t1 and one row from t2?
You’re looking for UNION, not JOIN.