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Self Join, as its name suggests, is a type of join that combines the records of a table with itself.
Suppose an organization, while organizing a Christmas party, is choosing a Secret Santa among its employees based on some colors. It is designed to be done by assigning one color to each of its employees and having them pick a color from the pool of various colors. In the end, they will become the Secret Santa of an employee this color is assigned to.
As we can see in the figure below, the information regarding the colors assigned and a color each employee picked is entered into a table. The table is joined to itself using self join over the color columns to match employees with their Secret Santa.
The SQL Self Join
The SQL Self Join is used to join a table to itself as if the table were two tables. To carry this out, alias of the tables should be used at least once.
Self Join is a type of inner join, which is performed in cases where the comparison between two columns of a same table is required; probably to establish a relationship between them. In other words, a table is joined with itself when it contains both Foreign Key and Primary Key in it.
Unlike queries of other joins, we use WHERE clause to specify the condition for the table to combine with itself; instead of the ON clause.
Syntax
Following is the basic syntax of SQL Self Join −
SELECT column_name(s) FROM table1 a, table1 b WHERE a.common_field = b.common_field;
Here, the WHERE clause could be any given expression based on your requirement.
Example
Self Join only requires one table, so, let us create a CUSTOMERS table containing the customer details like their names, age, address and the salary they earn.
CREATE TABLE CUSTOMERS ( ID INT NOT NULL, NAME VARCHAR (20) NOT NULL, AGE INT NOT NULL, ADDRESS CHAR (25), SALARY DECIMAL (18, 2), PRIMARY KEY (ID) );
Now, insert values into this table using the INSERT statement as follows −
INSERT INTO CUSTOMERS VALUES (1, ''Ramesh'', 32, ''Ahmedabad'', 2000.00 ), (2, ''Khilan'', 25, ''Delhi'', 1500.00 ), (3, ''Kaushik'', 23, ''Kota'', 2000.00 ), (4, ''Chaitali'', 25, ''Mumbai'', 6500.00 ), (5, ''Hardik'', 27, ''Bhopal'', 8500.00 ), (6, ''Komal'', 22, ''Hyderabad'', 4500.00 ), (7, ''Muffy'', 24, ''Indore'', 10000.00 );
The table will be created as −
ID | NAME | AGE | ADDRESS | SALARY |
---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Ramesh | 32 | Ahmedabad | 2000.00 |
2 | Khilan | 25 | Delhi | 1500.00 |
3 | Kaushik | 23 | Kota | 2000.00 |
4 | Chaitali | 25 | Mumbai | 6500.00 |
5 | Hardik | 27 | Bhopal | 8500.00 |
6 | Komal | 22 | Hyderabad | 4500.00 |
7 | Muffy | 24 | Indore | 10000.00 |
Now, let us join this table using the following Self Join query. Our aim is to establish a relationship among the said Customers on the basis of their earnings. We are doing this with the help of the WHERE clause.
SELECT a.ID, b.NAME as EARNS_HIGHER, a.NAME as EARNS_LESS, a.SALARY as LOWER_SALARY FROM CUSTOMERS a, CUSTOMERS b WHERE a.SALARY < b.SALARY;
Output
The resultant table displayed will list out all the customers that earn lesser than other customers −
ID | EARNS_HIGHER | EARNS_LESS | LOWER_SALARY |
---|---|---|---|
2 | Ramesh | Khilan | 1500.00 |
2 | Kaushik | Khilan | 1500.00 |
6 | Chaitali | Komal | 4500.00 |
3 | Chaitali | Kaushik | 2000.00 |
2 | Chaitali | Khilan | 1500.00 |
1 | Chaitali | Ramesh | 2000.00 |
6 | Hardik | Komal | 4500.00 |
4 | Hardik | Chaitali | 6500.00 |
3 | Hardik | Kaushik | 2000.00 |
2 | Hardik | Khilan | 1500.00 |
1 | Hardik | Ramesh | 2000.00 |
3 | Komal | Kaushik | 2000.00 |
2 | Komal | Khilan | 1500.00 |
1 | Komal | Ramesh | 2000.00 |
6 | Muffy | Komal | 4500.00 |
5 | Muffy | Hardik | 8500.00 |
4 | Muffy | Chaitali | 6500.00 |
3 | Muffy | Kaushik | 2000.00 |
2 | Muffy | Khilan | 1500.00 | 1 | Muffy | Ramesh | 2000.00 |
Self Join with ORDER BY Clause
After joining a table with itself using self join, the records in the combined table can also be sorted in an order, using the ORDER BY clause.
Syntax
Following is the syntax for it −
SELECT column_name(s) FROM table1 a, table1 b WHERE a.common_field = b.common_field ORDER BY column_name;
Example
Let us join the CUSTOMERS table with itself using self join on a WHERE clause; then, arrange the records in an ascending order using the ORDER BY clause with respect to a specified column, as shown in the following query.
SELECT a.ID, b.NAME as EARNS_HIGHER, a.NAME as EARNS_LESS, a.SALARY as LOWER_SALARY FROM CUSTOMERS a, CUSTOMERS b WHERE a.SALARY < b.SALARY ORDER BY a.SALARY;
Output
The resultant table is displayed as follows −
ID | EARNS_HIGHER | EARNS_LESS | LOWER_SALARY |
---|---|---|---|
2 | Ramesh | Khilan | 1500.00 |
2 | Kaushik | Khilan | 1500.00 |
2 | Chaitali | Khilan | 1500.00 |
2 | Hardik | Khilan | 1500.00 |
2 | Komal | Khilan | 1500.00 |
2 | Muffy | Khilan | 1500.00 |
3 | Chaitali | Kaushik | 2000.00 |
1 | Chaitali | Ramesh | 2000.00 |
3 | Hardik | Kaushik | 2000.00 |
1 | Hardik | Ramesh | 2000.00 |
3 | Komal | Kaushik | 2000.00 |
1 | Komal | Ramesh | 2000.00 |
3 | Muffy | Kaushik | 2000.00 |
1 | Muffy | Ramesh | 2000.00 |
6 | Chaitali | Komal | 4500.00 |
6 | Hardik | Komal | 4500.00 |
6 | Muffy | Komal | 4500.00 |
4 | Hardik | Chaitali | 6500.00 |
4 | Muffy | Chaitali | 6500.00 |
5 | Muffy | Hardik | 8500.00 |
Not just the salary column, the records can be sorted based on the alphabetical order of names, numerical order of Customer IDs etc.
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