If I use syntax like this
SELECT * FROM table_1, table_2 WHERE table_1.id=table_2.id;
is this an INNER JOIN? In other words, is this equivalent to
SELECT * FROM table_1 INNER JOIN table_2 ON table_1.id=table_2.id;
If I use syntax like this
SELECT * FROM table_1, table_2 WHERE table_1.id=table_2.id;
is this an INNER JOIN? In other words, is this equivalent to
SELECT * FROM table_1 INNER JOIN table_2 ON table_1.id=table_2.id;
Short answer: Yes, it is the same.
Most RDBMS will eventually process both syntax the same way.
Using the INNER JOIN
is considered to be better readable, and also is the ANSI standard.
For simple cases like this, it appears that the MySQL engine will optimize in the same way. I figured this out by running
DESCRIBE SELECT * FROM table_1, table_2 WHERE table_1.id=table_2.id;
and
DESCRIBE SELECT * FROM table_1 INNER JOIN table_2 ON table_1.id=table_2.id;
which tells you a bit about how the query will run.