But I'll explain anyway. Assuming you have created your database in a
more or less sensible way, you will end up with several tables that
contain C<related> information. For example, you may have a table
-containing information about C<CD>s, containing the CD title and it's
+containing information about C<CD>s, containing the CD title and its
year of publication, and another table containing all the C<Track>s
for the CDs, one track per row.
When you wish to extract information about a particular CD and all
-it's tracks, You can either fetch the CD row, then make another query
+its tracks, You can either fetch the CD row, then make another query
to fetch the tracks, or you can use a join. Compare:
SELECT ID, Title, Year FROM CD WHERE Title = 'Funky CD';
Or combine the two:
- join => { room => [ 'chair', { table => 'leg' } ]
+ join => { room => [ 'chair', { table => 'leg' } ] }
=head2 Table aliases
=cut
+=head1 FURTHER QUESTIONS?
+
+Check the list of L<additional DBIC resources|DBIx::Class/GETTING HELP/SUPPORT>.
+
+=head1 COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE
+
+This module is free software L<copyright|DBIx::Class/COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE>
+by the L<DBIx::Class (DBIC) authors|DBIx::Class/AUTHORS>. You can
+redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as the
+L<DBIx::Class library|DBIx::Class/COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE>.