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Blessed1978
Yak Posting Veteran
97 Posts |
Posted - 2014-11-07 : 19:20:49
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I created a lookup table that has ids in one column a names in the next. Instead of doing a case like statement on my employees table it should look into that lookup table and whereever it sees names in the name field in the employees table it should lookup the name in my lookup table and assign the id associated to it in the id field in my lookup table |
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gbritton
Master Smack Fu Yak Hacker
2780 Posts |
Posted - 2014-11-08 : 09:25:48
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Select e.stuff, l.nameFrom employees eJoin lookup lOn e.id = l.id |
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theboyholty
Posting Yak Master
226 Posts |
Posted - 2014-11-17 : 09:57:39
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Tiny amendment as the OP indicated he wanted to join on name . .Select e.stuff, l.idFrom employees eJoin lookup lOn e.name = l.name but basically the same thing and one of the building blocks of T-SQL. You'll really need to understand the principals here if you want to progress.In any case, surely you already have IDs in your employees table, otherwise how could you tell the difference between two or more employees of the same name? (Its pretty rare, but it happens, especially in larger organisations).---------------------------------------------------------------------------------http://www.mannyroadend.co.uk A Bury FC supporters website and forum |
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