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MySQL Help, Duplicate entries using where clause

I have two tables in my database:

test1 which looks like:

ID   pubmed_ID
-------------------
1    22
2    22

test2 looks like:

antigen    pubmed_ID
------------------
Hello      22
Bye        22

when i use the following select statment:

select * 
  from test1, test2 
 where test1.pubmed_ID = test2.pubmed_ID;

I get:

ID pubmed_ID antigen pubmed_ID
--------------------------------
1  22        Hello   22 开发者_如何转开发  
2  22        Hello   22   
1  22        Bye     22       
2  22        Bye     22

Why have the antigens been duplicated? When they only exist once in the test2 table?

The primary keys are as follows test1 = "ID" column and for test 2 both the "antigen" and "pubmed_ID" form a compund primary key

Am i missing something simple here?


Because both are matches. Which do you expect it to pick?

All the rows have the same pubmed_ID. Thus, each row of test1 matches each row of test2, so there are four (2*2) rows in the joined table.


It's because two records in test2 match per record in test1, based on the join criteria.

If you want it to be more selective, you need to add criteria that filters how you'd like.


Your join is operating as it should. You are matching pumed_ID which is the same for every row.

When the DBE grabs row 1 from table test1

ID   pubmed_ID
-------------------
1    22

And then matches to rows with the same pubmed_ID in table test2, both rows match...

antigen    pubmed_ID
------------------
Hello      22
Bye        22

The exact same thing happens with the second row from table test1, making the entire result set contain four rows.

Make sense?


It is simple, the test1.ID = 1 matches, through it's pubmed_ID both Hello and Bye, and the same for the other test1 record.

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