In layman’s term, if you are using “Select *”, you are displaying every column in every table you are joining. This message is saying I have reached my limit of columns to display. What I did is start getting specific to which columns I want to display. As I am joining new tables and want to see every column in the new table I just joined I do the following:
Example:
select
uacc.acc_num,
oacc.cm_log_owner_id,
ccomp.name,
ores.result_date,
ores.ord_value,
pat.pat_mrn_id,
pat.pat_name,
ztype.name as ENC_TYPE,
cser.prov_name as AUTHORIZING_PROVIDER,
ibm.*
Hope this helps.
Etmack
In layman’s term, if you are using “Select *”, you are displaying every column in every table you are joining. This message is saying I have reached my limit of columns to display. What I did is start getting specific to which columns I want to display. As I am joining new tables and want to see every column in the new table I just joined I do the following:
Example:
select
uacc.acc_num,
oacc.cm_log_owner_id,
ccomp.name,
ores.result_date,
ores.ord_value,
pat.pat_mrn_id,
pat.pat_name,
ztype.name as ENC_TYPE,
cser.prov_name as AUTHORIZING_PROVIDER,
ibm.*
Hope this helps.
Etmack