MySQL allows names that consist of a single identifier or
        multiple identifiers. The components of a multiple-part name
        must be separated by period
        (“.”) characters. The initial
        parts of a multiple-part name act as qualifiers that affect the
        context within which the final identifier is interpreted.
      
In MySQL, you can refer to a table column using any of the following forms.
| Column Reference | Meaning | 
col_name | 
The column col_name from whichever table used
                in the statement contains a column of that name. | 
tbl_name.col_name | 
The column col_name from table
                tbl_name of the default
                database. | 
db_name.tbl_name.col_name | 
The column col_name from table
                tbl_name of the database
                db_name. | 
        If any components of a multiple-part name require quoting, quote
        them individually rather than quoting the name as a whole. For
        example, write `my-table`.`my-column`, not
        `my-table.my-column`.
      
A reserved word that follows a period in a qualified name must be an identifier, so in that context it need not be quoted.
        You need not specify a tbl_name or
        db_name.tbl_name prefix for a column
        reference in a statement unless the reference would be
        ambiguous. Suppose that tables t1 and
        t2 each contain a column
        c, and you retrieve c in a
        SELECT statement that uses both
        t1 and t2. In this case,
        c is ambiguous because it is not unique among
        the tables used in the statement. You must qualify it with a
        table name as t1.c or t2.c
        to indicate which table you mean. Similarly, to retrieve from a
        table t in database db1
        and from a table t in database
        db2 in the same statement, you must refer to
        columns in those tables as
        db1.t. and
        col_namedb2.t..
      col_name
        The syntax
         means
        the table .tbl_nametbl_name in the default
        database. This syntax is accepted for ODBC compatibility because
        some ODBC programs prefix table names with a
        “.” character.
      

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