Google spreadsheet "=QUERY" join() equivalent function?

SqlGoogle SheetsGoogle Query-Language

Sql Problem Overview


This question is concerning joining two databases in Google spreadsheet using =QUERY function

I have a table like so in range A1:C3

a d g
b e h
c f i

I have another table

c j m
a k n
b l o

I want the final table to look like this

a d g k n
b e h l o 
c f i j m

I can do this by using a vlookup function pretty easily in cell D1 and paste it down and across, but my dataset is huge. I would need a whole page of vlookups and Google Spreadsheet tells I'm at my limit in complexities.

I look at the Google's Query Language reference... there doesn't seem to be an type of "join" functions mentioned. You would think it would be an easy "join on A" type operation.

Can anybody solves this without a vlookup?

Sql Solutions


Solution 1 - Sql

Short answer

Google QUERY Language version 0.7 (2016) doesn't include a JOIN (LEFT JOIN) operator but this could be achieved by using an array formula which result could be used as input for the QUERY function or for other uses.

Explanation

Array formulas and the array handling features of Google Sheets make possible to make a JOIN between two simple tables. In order to make easier to read, the proposed formula use named ranges instead of range references.

Named Ranges

  • table1 : Sheet1!A1:C3
  • table2 : Sheet2!A1:C3
  • ID : Sheet1!A1:A3

Formula

=ArrayFormula(
{
table1,
vlookup(ID,table2,COLUMN(Indirect("R1C2:R1C"&COLUMNS(table2),0)),0)
}
)

Remarks:

  • Using open ended ranges is possible but this could make the spreadsheet slower.
  • To speed up the recalculation time :
  1. Replace Indirect("R1C2:R1C"&COLUMNS(table2),0) by an array of constants from 2 to number of columns of table2.
  2. Remove the empty rows from the spreadsheet

Example

See this sheet for an example

Note

On 2017 Google improved the official help article in English about QUERY, QUERY function. It still doesn't include yet topics like this but could be helpful to understand how it works.

Solution 2 - Sql

You can use ARRAYFORMULA or YOU can just drag this formula: after an import or QUERY-ing the first table; in the D column:

=QUERY(Sheet2!A1:C3, "Select B,C WHERE A='" & A1 & "'", 0)

Solution 3 - Sql

So, this answers how you do it WITH a Vlookup-function, but in only one cell.
In your example, given that each table of data has the following cell references:

Table1: Sheet1!A1:C3

a d g
b e h
c f i

Table2: Sheet2!A1:C3

c j m
a k n
b l o

This is how the formula should be constructed.

Join-formula

=ArrayFormula(
   {
     Sheet1!A1:C,
     vlookup(Sheet1!A1:A, {Sheet2!A1:A, Sheet2!B1:C}, {2,3}, false)
   }
)

The key to get this formula to work, is to understand how to use curly brackets in the Vlookup Range. You basically define the first cell reference of the Range as the column which is to be a match to the Vlookup Search_Key. The rest of the cell references in the Range is in relation to the columns which you would like to join.

The Index is written as {2,3} to return the second and third column of the Range (the Range consists of a total of 3 columns); curly brackets has nothing to do with Arrayformula in the Vlookup Index, but is necessary to return multiple columns from the Vlookup function. The reason to not write {1,2,3} is because you would not like to include the column which is being used for the purpose of joining.

Example where the column in table2 used for joining, is located in a different column (to the right of the data which is to be joined)

This kind of Join-formula can be utilized even if the join-column in the second table is located as the third column of that table. Let's say that the raw-data in this example would look like this:

Table1 (Sheet1):

a d g
b e h
c f i

Table2 (Sheet2):

j m c
k n a
l o b

If you write the formula like this, you'll still get the desired outcome (as displayed in the table of joined data):

=ArrayFormula(
   {
     Sheet1!A1:C,
     vlookup(Sheet1!A1:A, {Sheet2!C1:C, Sheet2!A1:B}, {2,3}, false)
   }
)

The table of joined data:

a d g k n
b e h l o 
c f i j m

In the Join-formula, notice that the third column of Table2 is located as the first cell reference in the Vlookup Range!
The reason to why this works, is because when you use curly brackets in the Range (in conjunction with Arrayformula), the Vlookup Search_Key will NOT look for a column as a common denominator within the raw-data, instead it will use the Array within curly brackets as a reference to find a column as a common denominator (by default this is the first column of the Range).

I've written a comprehensive guide about this topic called:

'Mastering Join-formulas in Google Sheets'

Solution 4 - Sql

I solved this by using Javascript LINQ (language integrated query).

It lets you specify Javascript with complex join conditions. You can also perform other SQL queries such as Grouping, Projecting, Sorting and Filtering your sheets as if they were database tables. Look at the links below.

Note that in the LINQ query language I replaced all spaces in column names with underscores to make them valid JS identifiers.

https://docs.google.com/spreadsheets/d/1DHtQlQUlo-X_YVfo-Wo-b7315sSk2pxL5ci4Y9lxvZo/edit?usp=sharing

https://script.google.com/d/1R5L2ReHJrBRwyoSoVOFLzEQZiGtxidPfPkAeVownt7SWX6TpacY7gA7j/edit?usp=sharing

Solution 5 - Sql

If you can map each "index" (a, b, c) to a specific row or column, then you could use the INDEX function.

In this case, you could probably map 'a' to column A (or row 1), 'b' to column B (or row 2), and so on.

Also, Merge Tables seem to address this exact use case.

Solution 6 - Sql

With the 'other' table in A5:C7, please try:

=query({A1:C3,query(sort(A5:C7,1,TRUE),"Select Col2,Col3")})

Attributions

All content for this solution is sourced from the original question on Stackoverflow.

The content on this page is licensed under the Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 International (CC BY-SA 4.0) license.

Content TypeOriginal AuthorOriginal Content on Stackoverflow
QuestionjasonView Question on Stackoverflow
Solution 1 - SqlRubénView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 2 - SqlWhite_KingView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 3 - SqlViktorView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 4 - Sqluser2738245View Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 5 - SqlMarco RoyView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 6 - SqlpnutsView Answer on Stackoverflow