last day (17 days later) » 

14:19
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A: Where clause with a list of field combinations

Johann StrydomWhat about doing a distinct query? I feel like I'm missing something here.

That would remove duplicate rows. Every row in the table is unique already.
If you paste the query you would write in SQL (even a pseudo code version) it would make it much easier to see what you're trying to do.
Did you read my question? I provided two sample queries.
What I don't get is why you need to fetch the combinations if you already know what they are. It would make sense to me if you wanted a query to determined the combinations instead.
Put another way, why are you interested in (1, 2) but not (2, 1)?
In my sample, what I need is the baz field. But I also still need to be able to match those values back to the foo and bar combination, so I'm also querying them. Your second comment makes no sense, that's like asking "why are you interested in the customer with ID 1 and not the customer with ID 2".
14:20
Maybe if you say what you're actually doing, in other words what is foo and bar etc. I'll understand better.
My source table is a junction table, so foo and bar would be a combined primary key.
However, I don't think it matters very much that they are the primary key.
Ok so Table1.Key1 = Foo and Table2.Key2 = bar. So why are you only interested in Table1.Key1 = 1, Table2.Key2 = 2 but not the reverse?
Because that's the data I need, I'm not understanding your point?
OK sorry man. Really tried to help.
I appreciate it but I don't think we'll get any further unfortunately.

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