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SELECT * FROM flights INNER JOIN airports ON flights.fairport = airports.code AND flights.tairport = airports.code WHERE (airports.code = departureCode OR airports.city= …@A LEFT JOIN is absolutely not faster than an INNER JOIN. In fact, its slower; by definition, an outer join (LEFT JOIN or RIGHT JOIN) has to do all the work of an INNER JOIN plus t,The fact that when it says INNER JOIN, you can be sure of what it does and that its supposed to be just that, whereas a plain JOIN will leave you, or someone else, wondering what ~The question and solutions pertain specifically to INNER JOINs. If the join is a LEFT/RIGHT/FULL OUTER JOIN, then it is not a matter of preference or performance, but one of correc-INNER JOIN gets all records that are common between both tables based on the supplied ON clause. LEFT JOIN gets all records from the LEFT linked and the related record from the rig^You can join tables on specific columns, I think you got that far. With the AND in the inner join you can specify it even more. Join the tables on the columns, where A1.Column = T"Im pretty new to Python and am completely confused by .join() which I have read is the preferred method for concatenating strings. I tried: strid = repr(595) print array.array(c


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