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Wednesday, July 29, 2009

SQL Join Tactics

Join conditions can be specified in either the FROM or WHERE clauses. Specifying them in the FROM clause is recommended. From Microsoft MSDN. WHERE and HAVING clauses can also contain search conditions to further filter the rows selected by the join conditions.

Joins can be categorized as:

1. Inner joins: (the typical join operation, which uses some comparison operator like =). Inner joins use a comparison operator to match rows from two tables based on the values in common columns from each table. This includes equi-join or natural join. For example, retrieving all rows where the employee number is the same in both the employee and working-hour tables.

2. Outer joins: Outer joins can be a left, a right, or full outer join.
LEFT JOIN or LEFT OUTER JOIN The result set of a left outer join includes all the rows from the left table specified in the LEFT OUTER clause, not just the ones in which the joined columns match. When a row in the left table has no matching rows in the right table, the associated result set row contains null values for all select list columns coming from the right table.

RIGHT JOIN or RIGHT OUTER JOIN a right outer join is the reverse of a left outer join. All rows from the right table are returned. Null values are returned for the left table any time a right table row has no matching row in the left table.

3. FULL JOIN or FULL OUTER JOIN A full outer join returns all rows in both the left and right tables. Any time a row has no match in the other table, the select list columns from the other table contain null values. When there is a match between the tables, the entire result set row contains data values from the base tables.

4. CROSS JOINS Cross joins return all rows from the left table. Each row from the left table is combined with all rows from the right table. Cross joins are also called Cartesian products.

For more detail please read. http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/ms191472.aspx

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