Object names may be unqualified or qualified. An unqualified name is permitted in contexts where interpretation of the name is unambiguous. A qualified name includes at least one qualifier to clarify the interpretive context by overriding a default context or providing missing context.
        For example, this statement creates a table using the
        unqualified name t1:
      
CREATE TABLE t1 (i INT);
        Because t1 includes no qualifier to specify a
        database, the statement creates the table in the default
        database. If there is no default database, an error occurs.
      
        This statement creates a table using the qualified name
        db1.t1:
      
CREATE TABLE db1.t1 (i INT);
        Because db1.t1 includes a database qualifier
        db1, the statement creates
        t1 in the database named
        db1, regardless of the default database. The
        qualifier must be specified if there is no
        default database. The qualifier may be
        specified if there is a default database, to specify a database
        different from the default, or to make the database explicit if
        the default is the same as the one specified.
      
Qualifiers have these characteristics:
- An unqualified name consists of a single identifier. A qualified name consists of 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 to interpret the final identifier.
- The qualifier character is a separate token and need not be contiguous with the associated identifiers. For example, - tbl_name.col_nameand- tbl_name . col_nameare equivalent.
- 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. 
The permitted qualifiers for object names depend on the object type:
- A database name is fully qualified and takes no qualifier: - CREATE DATABASE db1;
- A table, view, or stored program name may be given a database-name qualifier. Examples of unqualified and qualified names in - CREATEstatements:- CREATE TABLE mytable ...; CREATE VIEW myview ...; CREATE PROCEDURE myproc ...; CREATE FUNCTION myfunc ...; CREATE EVENT myevent ...; CREATE TABLE mydb.mytable ...; CREATE VIEW mydb.myview ...; CREATE PROCEDURE mydb.myproc ...; CREATE FUNCTION mydb.myfunc ...; CREATE EVENT mydb.myevent ...;
- A trigger is associated with a table, so any qualifier applies to the table name: - CREATE TRIGGER mytrigger ... ON mytable ...; CREATE TRIGGER mytrigger ... ON mydb.mytable ...;
- A column name may be given multiple qualifiers to indicate context in statements that reference it, as shown in the following table. - Column Reference - Meaning - col_name- Column - col_namefrom whichever table used in the statement contains a column of that name- tbl_name.col_name- Column - col_namefrom table- tbl_nameof the default database- db_name.tbl_name.col_name- Column - col_namefrom table- tbl_nameof the database- db_name- In other words, a column name may be given a table-name qualifier, which itself may be given a database-name qualifier. Examples of unqualified and qualified column references in - SELECTstatements:- SELECT c1 FROM mytable WHERE c2 > 100; SELECT mytable.c1 FROM mytable WHERE mytable.c2 > 100; SELECT mydb.mytable.c1 FROM mydb.mytable WHERE mydb.mytable.c2 > 100;
        You need not specify a qualifier for an object reference in a
        statement unless the unqualified reference is ambiguous. Suppose
        that column c1 occurs only in table
        t1, c2 only in
        t2, and c in both
        t1 and t2. Any unqualified
        reference to c is ambiguous in a statement
        that refers to both tables and must be qualified as
        t1.c or t2.c to indicate
        which table you mean:
      
SELECT c1, c2, t1.c FROM t1 INNER JOIN t2
WHERE t2.c > 100;
        Similarly, to retrieve from a table t in
        database db1 and from a table
        t in database db2 in the
        same statement, you must qualify the table references: For
        references to columns in those tables, qualifiers are required
        only for column names that appear in both tables. Suppose that
        column c1 occurs only in table
        db1.t, c2 only in
        db2.t, and c in both
        db1.t and db2.t. In this
        case, c is ambiguous and must be qualified
        but c1 and c2 need not be:
      
SELECT c1, c2, db1.t.c FROM db1.t INNER JOIN db2.t
WHERE db2.t.c > 100;Table aliases enable qualified column references to be written more simply:
SELECT c1, c2, t1.c FROM db1.t AS t1 INNER JOIN db2.t AS t2
WHERE t2.c > 100;