Please help! I'm trying to join using the same table twice, thus I need to do an alias. This is the first time I've ever tried an alias, so I don't know if I'm doing this right.
If I were writing SQL code, I would write something like the following: SELECT db.work.*, db.tcolor.html_code, db.ccolor.html_code FROM db.work LEFT OUTER JOIN color as tcolor ON db.work.title_color == tcolor.id LEFT OUTER JOIN color as ccolor ON db.work.cover_color == ccolor.id This is what I'm trying, but it's yielding an error: OperationalError: ambiguous column name: color.html_code def view(): t=db.color.with_alias('t') c=db.color.with_alias('c') accessible_works=db().select(db.work.ALL, db.t.html_code, db.c.html_code, left=[db.t.on(db.t.id==db.work.title_color), db.c.on(db.c.id==db.work.cover_color)]) return dict(works=accessible_works) *I'm seeing the following in the variables: *('SELECT work.id, work.title, work.title_font, wor...lor LEFT JOIN color ON color.id=work.cover_color;',) *What am I doing wrong? (In case it's useful, I'm running on a PC *from source code, version 1.87.2, downloaded this morning.) Thanks for your help, Audra