'Which table exactly is the "left" table and "right" table in a JOIN statement (SQL)?
What makes a given table the left table?
Is it that the table is indicated in the "From" part of the query?
Or, is it the left table because it is on the left hand side of the = operator?
Are the following equivalent
SELECT *
FROM left_table
LEFT JOIN right_table ON left_table.right_id = right_table.id
and
SELECT *
FROM left_table
LEFT JOIN right_table on right_table.left_id = left_table.id
???
Thanks
Solution 1:[1]
The right table is always the table that you are joining on. So yes, both of your statements are equivalent.
JOIN [Table] ON ...
[Table] is always the right table.
Solution 2:[2]
Roughly "left" is the result of everything that appears first in the whole FROM clause when reading from left to right - including the result of other JOINs, sub-queries, VIEWs and STORED PROCEDURES.
Both SQL statements are equivalent because the = operator at the ON part of the JOIN clause is symmetric (if a = b then b = a) so the result is the same no matter the order.
The regular join shows only the lines where the ON clause of the JOIN is true, while the LEFT JOIN shows also the records from "left" if the condition is false (showing NULL for any column from "right" present in the SELECT).
For example:
-- People: -- Car
id | name owner_id | model
---+------------ ---------+------------
1 | Paul 1 | Ferrari
2 | Nancy 2 | Porsche
3 | Arthur NULL | Lamborghini
4 | Alfred 10 | Maserati
> select people.name, car.model from people join car on car.owner_id=people.id;
name | model
---------+--------------
Paul | Ferrari
Nancy | Porsche
2 record(s) found
> select people.name, car.model from people left join car on
car.owner_id=people.id;
name | model
---------+--------------
Paul | Ferrari
Nancy | Porsche
Arthur | NULL
Alfred | NULL
4 record(s) found
> select people.name, car.model from people left join car on
people.id = car.owner_id;
name | model
---------+--------------
Paul | Ferrari
Nancy | Porsche
Arthur | NULL
Alfred | NULL
4 record(s) found
Solution 3:[3]
See this for a pretty good walkthrough on joins: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Join_(SQL)
And yes, both statements are equivalent :-)
Solution 4:[4]
Yes, it's determined by the side of the JOIN operator the table appears on. Your two examples are indeed equivalent.
Solution 5:[5]
CREATE TABLE ORDERS (
ORDERID INT,
CUSTOMERID INT,
ORDERDATE DATE
);
INSERT INTO ORDERS VALUES (10123,10,DATE '16-08-20');
INSERT INTO ORDERS VALUES (10122,11,DATE '14-09-20');
INSERT INTO ORDERS VALUES (10121,12,DATE '10-10-20');
CREATE TABLE CUSTOMERS (
CUSTOMERID INT,
CUSTOMERNAME VARCHAR(20),
COUNTRY VARCHAR(20)
);
INSERT INTO CUSTOMERS VALUES (11 , 'BUDDHA','INDIA');
INSERT INTO CUSTOMERS VALUES (12 , 'JOHNWIK','UNITED STATES');
INSERT INTO CUSTOMERS VALUES (100, 'SERENA','UNITED KINGDOM');
discussing LEFT JOIN query:
select orders.orderid, customers.customername, orders.orderdate from orders
inner join customers on orders.customerid = customers.customerid;
If you want to know exact left and right tables. From left to right the table attached with from is [left] and table attached with join is [right].
Happy Hacking !!!
Sources
This article follows the attribution requirements of Stack Overflow and is licensed under CC BY-SA 3.0.
Source: Stack Overflow
| Solution | Source |
|---|---|
| Solution 1 | mbillard |
| Solution 2 | |
| Solution 3 | Gabriel Magana |
| Solution 4 | Dan J |
| Solution 5 | Gautham Reddy |
