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I'm using Oracle 10g (XE 10.2.0.1.0), and find a behavior that I don't understand:

select * 
from employees manager
    join employees worker on MANAGER.EMPLOYEE_ID = WORKER.MANAGER_ID
    join departments on DEPARTMENTS.manager_id = 108
where
    department_id = 100
;

The problem is I think Oracle should have complain about the ambiguity of department_id in the where clause, since it's a column in both the table employees and departments. The fact is in Oracle 10g, it doesn't, and the result shows that it interprets the department_id as the one in departments. However, if I comment out the second join statement (4th line above), Oracle does complain “ORA-00918: column ambiguously defined” as expected.

So, can somebody help to explain how the ambiguity is defined in Oracle 10g? Or perhaps this is a bug in 10g?

BTW: The tables are defined in the default HR schema bundled in the Oracle 10g.

Update: Just found a related post: Why does Oracle SQL mysteriously resolve ambiguity in one joins and does not in others

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  • Maybe it is because it is the only one without an alias name. So everything without "<alias>." in front of is first treated to be something from departments. Do you get the ORA-Error when you give departments an alias, too? Jun 9, 2011 at 13:17
  • 2
    using 11gr2 I cannot recreate this (always get ORA-00918). Maybe try the Beta 11gR2 XE and see if you can recreate. Sounds like a bug
    – Harrison
    Jun 9, 2011 at 13:51
  • @Fatal the alias doesn't solve the mystery. select * from employees manager join employees worker on MANAGER.EMPLOYEE_ID = WORKER.MANAGER_ID join departments depts on depts.manager_id = 108 where department_id = 100 ;
    – Sapience
    Jun 9, 2011 at 13:55
  • @Harrison thanks. Is there a bug database of Oracle 10g that logs this bug?
    – Sapience
    Jun 9, 2011 at 13:58
  • 1
    I've seen the same thing on 10g and was getting the wrong results because of it. But I didn't bother trying to find out who has the support contacts with Oracle, I just qualified the column so I would get the correct results. Jun 9, 2011 at 16:45

2 Answers 2

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I believe it is a bug in Oracle 10g that Oracle chose not to fix. When we were upgrading our applications from 10g to 11gR2, we found a couple of queries that were written "loosely" in respect of ambiguous column names but worked in Oracle 10g. They all stopped working in 11gR2. We contacted Oracle but they pretty much said that the tolerant behavior toward ambiguous column names is a correct behavior for Oracle 10g and the stringent behavior is the correct behavior for 11g.

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  • 2
    Correct behavior in 10g? Someone @ Oracle is blowing smoke. Jun 9, 2011 at 16:44
  • 2
    @SShannon Severance: They just try to move everyone to the 11g and 11gR2. I believe starting July 1st a licensee that choses to stick with 10g will have to move to a higher level of support and, correspondingly, pay higher licensing fee.
    – Olaf
    Jun 9, 2011 at 18:54
  • It is fixed in some versions of 10g. For a specific Oracle Support reference and affected versions see my answer on another similar question: stackoverflow.com/a/4306406/4632
    – BQ.
    May 10, 2012 at 18:24
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I think it is, because departments have no alias. Therefore everything without being qualified by an <alias>. is first treated to be from departments.

So I also think when you give departments an alias you should get the ORA-00918 again. Cannot test here though...

1
  • I just tested it, and that's not the cause, even I give an alias to departments, it shows the same result without errors.
    – Sapience
    Jun 9, 2011 at 13:52

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