You can simply join the table of different database. You need to specify the database name in your FROM
clause. To make it shorter, add an ALIAS
on it,
SELECT a.*, -- this will display all columns of dba.`UserName`
b.`Message`
FROM dba.`UserName` a -- or LEFT JOIN to show all rows whether it exists or not
INNER JOIN dbB.`PrivateMessage` b
ON a.`username` = b.`username`
but some how, there are possiblities where-in a username
won't have messages. In this case use LEFT JOIN
if you want still to show all the records of dba.Username
.
Reading from your comments, the tables have different collation
. The work around on this is to specify COLLATE
on your joined statements,
SELECT a.*, -- this will display all columns of dba.`UserName`
b.`Message`
FROM dba.`UserName` COLLATE latin1_swedish_ci a
LEFT JOIN dbB.`PrivateMessage` COLLATE latin1_swedish_ci b
ON a.`username` = b.`username`
you can change latin1_swedish_ci
to whatever you want.
For more info on COLLATION, see this full list of
Character Sets and Collations in MySQL
If you have enough privilege to ALTER
the tables, simply use this syntax to manually convert and match their collations,
ALTER TABLE tbl_name CONVERT TO CHARACTER SET latin2 COLLATE 'latin2_general_ci';
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