(good = the code does what the user is expecting)
No, that is not even close to the only requirement, or to the standard expected.
To avoid downvotes on answers, the most important step is to not answer bad questions. At all times, keep in mind that Stack Overflow is not a discussion forum. The key consequence of this is that we have a very high standard for questions. (Or at least, one that - when properly applied - excludes almost everything that is asked. Personally, I think this says more about the questions than the standard, but...)
The question here (now deleted) is a plain requirements dump. It doesn't try to explain what actual difficulty is being encountered; and it imposes a constraint that doesn't make a lot of sense (it asks not to use subqueries; but as you and everyone else noted, the problem is solved with a simple join
and there is no good reason why anyone would use subqueries for it). These factors point at a homework question, for which we have specific guidance. (The requirements are not really different from normal, but we do pay some special attention to avoiding plagiarism.)
More importantly, the question doesn't show any attempt to understand the task. I want to stress here that it would be fine to ask a question about how to join SQL tables without knowing that there is a join
keyword or really anything about SQL beyond how to create the tables. However, there must be some attempt to analyze the problem, break it down into logical steps, and ensure that the problem isn't really multiple problems in one. There also needs to be some indication of what OP wants the code to do - in problem terms, not in task terms. Something like "I have data that associates each studName
with a studentid
, and each studentid
with a teacherid
. How can I use SQL to correlate that information, and associate teacherid
s with studName
s? Similarly, how can I then use the association of teacherid
to teacherName
, in order to associate each studName
with a teacherName
?" (Yes, those are two separate problems, technically; but it is the same problem both times, and - as evident in the code you provided - they can both be solved in the same breath).