I have a pretty long query in which, at some point, I have this :
LEFT OUTER JOIN T1 ON T1.ID = T2.ID
Since I got incorrect results from my query (too many rows), I was working on it and when I tried this :
LEFT OUTER JOIN (SELECT * FROM T1) T1 ON T1.ID = T2.ID
then got what I wanted. I would like to know why these two lines give different results. Can somebody explain it to me?
P.S. I use SQL Server 2008.
Edit 2: I posted a video on YouTube showing the problem.
Edit 1: here is the complete minimal query that shows the problem:
SELECT
Project.ProjectID,
Contract.ContractID,
BookletStatus.PrintStatusID AS StatusID
FROM
Project
INNER JOIN Contract ON Contract.ContractID = Project.SignedContractID
INNER JOIN BookProject ON BookProject.ProjectID = Project.ProjectID
LEFT OUTER JOIN (SELECT * FROM Booklet) Booklet1 ON Booklet1.ContractID = Contract.ContractID
INNER JOIN PrintStatus AS CoverStatus ON BookProject.CoverStatusID = CoverStatus.PrintStatusID
INNER JOIN PrintStatus AS BookletStatus ON
(CASE
WHEN Booklet1.Qty > 0 THEN BookProject.BookletStatusID
ELSE -10
END) = BookletStatus.PrintStatusID
Here are the results, with the inner query "(SELECT * FROM Booklet) Booklet1":
ProjectID ContractID StatusID
501 1356 -10
502 1317 -10
503 1371 -10
...
And the results without the inner query (using just "Booklet Booklet1"):
ProjectID ContractID StatusID
501 1356 -10
501 1356 0
501 1356 10
501 1356 15
501 1356 20
...
502 1317 -10
502 1317 0
502 1317 10
502 1317 15
502 1317 20
...
503 1371 -10
503 1371 0
503 1371 10
503 1371 15
503 1371 20
...
SELECT * FROM T2 LEFT OUTER JOIN T1 ...
with the two variations, and see if it demonstrates the issue, then you'll have a smaller query, and can post the complete query. If you can't reproduce the issue like that, then it's an indication that the rest of the query contributes somehow to the behavior you're seeing than just the snippet you posted.