Is it possible to write join query without ON
statement? and how do these joins differ LEFT JOIN, RIGHT JOIN
works.
MySQL documentation covers this topic.
Here is a synopsis. When using join
or inner join
, the on
condition is optional. This is different from the ANSI standard and different from almost any other database. The effect is a cross join
. Similarly, you can use an on
clause with cross join
, which also differs from standard SQL.
A cross join creates a Cartesian product -- that is, every possible combination of 1 row from the first table and 1 row from the second. The cross join for a table with three rows ('a', 'b', and 'c') and a table with four rows (say 1, 2, 3, 4) would have 12 rows.
In practice, if you want to do a cross join, then use cross join
:
from A cross join B
is much better than:
from A, B
and:
from A join B -- with no on clause
The on
clause is required for a right or left outer join, so the discussion is not relevant for them.
If you need to understand the different types of joins, then you need to do some studying on relational databases. Stackoverflow is not an appropriate place for that level of discussion.
See some example in http://www.sitepoint.com/understanding-sql-joins-mysql-database/
You can use 'USING' instead of 'ON' as in the query
SELECT * FROM table1 LEFT JOIN table2 USING (id);
-
3For additional clarification, the joining column in both tables must be identically named for USING to work – rmirabelle Feb 2 '16 at 18:26
You might also want to investigate the use of UNION, which combines multiple tables for one output: SQL - Combine two tables for one output
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4
ON
clause tells the server how the tables are related, no. If your different join types all give the same result you're doing it wrong somehow, and adding some code could help us spot your problem. In the mean time head over to Jeff Atwood's blog for a 2 minute intro to the different join types. – fvu May 9 '13 at 21:04