You need to put it in the join
clause, not the where
:
SELECT *
FROM categories
LEFT JOIN user_category_subscriptions ON
user_category_subscriptions.category_id = categories.category_id
and user_category_subscriptions.user_id =1
See, with an inner join
, putting a clause in the join
or the where
is equivalent. However, with an outer join
, they are vastly different.
As a join
condition, you specify the rowset that you will be joining to the table. This means that it evaluates user_id = 1
first, and takes the subset of user_category_subscriptions
with a user_id
of 1
to join to all of the rows in categories
. This will give you all of the rows in categories
, while only the categories
that this particular user has subscribed to will have any information in the user_category_subscriptions
columns. Of course, all other categories
will be populated with null
in the user_category_subscriptions
columns.
Conversely, a where
clause does the join, and then reduces the rowset. So, this does all of the joins and then eliminates all rows where user_id
doesn't equal 1
. You're left with an inefficient way to get an inner join
.
Hopefully this helps!
Try this
SELECT *
FROM categories
LEFT JOIN user_category_subscriptions
ON user_category_subscriptions.category_id = categories.category_id
WHERE user_category_subscriptions.user_id = 1
or user_category_subscriptions.user_id is null
If you love us? You can donate to us via Paypal or buy me a coffee so we can maintain and grow! Thank you!
Donate Us With