Tuesday, October 20, 2015
Monday, October 19, 2015
The SQL UNION
The SQL UNION Operator
The UNION operator is used to combine the result-set of two or more SELECT statements.Notice that each SELECT statement within the UNION must have the same number of columns. The columns must also have similar data types. Also, the columns in each SELECT statement must be in the same order.
SQL UNION Syntax
SELECT column_name(s) FROM table1
UNION
SELECT column_name(s) FROM table2;
Note: The UNION operator selects only distinct values by default. To
allow duplicate values, use the ALL keyword with UNION.SQL UNION ALL Syntax
SELECT column_name(s) FROM table1
UNION ALL
SELECT column_name(s) FROM table2;
PS: The column names in the result-set of a UNION are usually equal to
the column names in the first SELECT statement in the UNION.Demo Database
In this tutorial we will use the well-known Northwind sample database.Below is a selection from the "Customers" table:
CustomerID | CustomerName | ContactName | Address | City | PostalCode | Country |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 |
Alfreds Futterkiste | Maria Anders | Obere Str. 57 | Berlin | 12209 | Germany |
2 | Ana Trujillo Emparedados y helados | Ana Trujillo | Avda. de la Constitución 2222 | México D.F. | 05021 | Mexico |
3 | Antonio Moreno Taquería | Antonio Moreno | Mataderos 2312 | México D.F. | 05023 | Mexico |
SupplierID | SupplierName | ContactName | Address | City | PostalCode | Country |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Exotic Liquid | Charlotte Cooper | 49 Gilbert St. | Londona | EC1 4SD | UK |
2 | New Orleans Cajun Delights | Shelley Burke | P.O. Box 78934 | New Orleans | 70117 | USA |
3 | Grandma Kelly's Homestead | Regina Murphy | 707 Oxford Rd. | Ann Arbor | 48104 | USA |
SQL UNION Example
The following SQL statement selects all the different cities (only distinct values) from the "Customers" and the "Suppliers" tables:Example
SELECT City FROM Customers
UNION
SELECT City FROM Suppliers
ORDER
BY City;
City
Aachen
Albuquerque
Anchorage
Ann Arbor
Annecy
Århus
Barcelona
SQL FULL OUTER JOIN
SQL FULL OUTER JOIN Keyword
The FULL OUTER JOIN keyword returns all rows from the left table (table1) and from the right table (table2).The FULL OUTER JOIN keyword combines the result of both LEFT and RIGHT joins.
SQL FULL OUTER JOIN Syntax
SELECT column_name(s)
FROM table1
FULL OUTER JOIN table2
ON table1.column_name=table2.column_name;
Demo Database
In this tutorial we will use the well-known Northwind sample database.Below is a selection from the "Customers" table:
CustomerID | CustomerName | ContactName | Address | City | PostalCode | Country |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 |
Alfreds Futterkiste | Maria Anders | Obere Str. 57 | Berlin | 12209 | Germany |
2 | Ana Trujillo Emparedados y helados | Ana Trujillo | Avda. de la Constitución 2222 | México D.F. | 05021 | Mexico |
3 | Antonio Moreno Taquería | Antonio Moreno | Mataderos 2312 | México D.F. | 05023 | Mexico |
OrderID | CustomerID | EmployeeID | OrderDate | ShipperID |
---|---|---|---|---|
10308 | 2 | 7 | 1996-09-18 | 3 |
10309 | 37 | 3 | 1996-09-19 | 1 |
10310 | 77 | 8 | 1996-09-20 | 2 |
SQL FULL OUTER JOIN Example
The following SQL statement selects all customers, and all orders:
SELECT Customers.CustomerName, Orders.OrderID
FROM Customers
FULL OUTER JOIN Orders
ON Customers.CustomerID=Orders.CustomerID
ORDER BY Customers.CustomerName;
A selection from the result set may look like this:CustomerName | OrderID |
---|---|
Alfreds Futterkiste | |
Ana Trujillo Emparedados y helados | 10308 |
Antonio Moreno Taquería | 10365 |
10382 | |
10351 |
SQL RIGHT JOIN
SQL RIGHT JOIN Keyword
The RIGHT JOIN keyword returns all rows from the right table (table2), with the matching rows in the left table (table1). The result is NULL in the left side when there is no match.SQL RIGHT JOIN Syntax
SELECT column_name(s)
FROM table1
RIGHT JOIN table2
ON table1.column_name=table2.column_name;
or:
SELECT column_name(s)
FROM table1
RIGHT OUTER JOIN table2
ON table1.column_name=table2.column_name;
PS! In some databases RIGHT JOIN is called RIGHT OUTER JOIN.Demo Database
In this tutorial we will use the well-known Northwind sample database.Below is a selection from the "Orders" table:
OrderID | CustomerID | EmployeeID | OrderDate | ShipperID |
---|---|---|---|---|
10308 | 2 | 7 | 1996-09-18 | 3 |
10309 | 37 | 3 | 1996-09-19 | 1 |
10310 | 77 | 8 | 1996-09-20 | 2 |
And a selection from the "Employees" table:
EmployeeID | LastName | FirstName | BirthDate | Photo | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Davolio | Nancy | 12/8/1968 | EmpID1.pic | Education includes a BA in psychology..... |
2 | Fuller | Andrew | 2/19/1952 | EmpID2.pic | Andrew received his BTS commercial and.... |
3 | Leverling | Janet | 8/30/1963 | EmpID3.pic | Janet has a BS degree in chemistry.... |
SQL RIGHT JOIN Example
The following SQL statement will return all employees, and any orders they have placed:Example
SELECT Orders.OrderID, Employees.FirstName
FROM Orders
RIGHT JOIN
Employees
ON Orders.EmployeeID=Employees.EmployeeID
ORDER BY
Orders.OrderID;
OrderID FirstName
Adam
10248
Steven
10249
Michael
10250
Margaret
10251
Janet
10252
Margaret
10253
Janet
10254
Steven
10255
Anne
10256
Janet
10257
Margaret
10258
Nancy
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