5

See the below 3 Counts, just to give you a brief idea about the table data. All skCitizen in [dbo].[LUEducation] is present in [dbo].[LUCitizen]

SELECT  COUNT(*) FROM   [dbo].[LUCitizen] --115000 ROWS
SELECT  COUNT(*) FROM   [dbo].[LUEducation]  --201846 ROWS

SELECT  COUNT(*) --212695 ROWS
FROM    [dbo].[LUCitizen] C
LEFT JOIN   [dbo].[LUEducation] E
ON      C.skCitizen = E.skCitizen

SELECT  COUNT(*) FROM   [dbo].[LUEducation] WHERE skSchool = 24417 --4 ROWS

See the below 2 queries,

SELECT  C.skCitizen,E.skCitizen
FROM    [dbo].[LUCitizen] C
LEFT JOIN   [dbo].[LUEducation] E
ON      C.skCitizen = E.skCitizen
WHERE   E.skSchool = 24417
--4 ROWS

SELECT  C.skCitizen,E.skCitizen
FROM    [dbo].[LUCitizen] C
LEFT JOIN   (SELECT * FROM [dbo].[LUEducation] WHERE skSchool = 24417) E
ON      C.skCitizen = E.skCitizen
--115000 ROWS

In the last 2 queries, the confusing query for me is the 1st one. There i expected 115000 rows, but only 4 rows displayed. According to my understanding, Full rows from [dbo].[LUCitizen] will be displayed, then 4 rows from [dbo].[LUEducation] will be LEFT Joined.

Why is the 2 Queries different?

Pardon me , if this is a duplicate question.

4
  • 1
    That's because the one returning 4 rows is implicitly converting into a regular (INNER) JOIN. After the LEFT JOIN, there's a bunch of rows where e.skSchool IS NULL; since null <> 24417, it throws those out.... there has to be a duplicate for this somewhere... Aug 25, 2014 at 12:14
  • possible duplicate of Left Join With Where Clause Aug 25, 2014 at 12:17
  • 2
    @Clockwork-Muse: You're right about the rows, but it's not correct to say that null <> 24417. The result of true <> 24417 is unknown, which is neither true nor false
    – Andomar
    Aug 26, 2014 at 6:22
  • @Andomar - you're right, that's a more nuanced version. Aug 26, 2014 at 8:18

2 Answers 2

8

When you do this:

SELECT  C.skCitizen,E.skCitizen
FROM    [dbo].[LUCitizen] C
LEFT JOIN   [dbo].[LUEducation] E
ON      C.skCitizen = E.skCitizen
WHERE   E.skSchool = 24417;

You are turning the left join into an inner join, because E.skSchool is NULL for non-matching rows. The correct way to put a condition on the second table in a left join is to use the on clause:

SELECT  C.skCitizen,E.skCitizen
FROM    [dbo].[LUCitizen] C
LEFT JOIN   [dbo].[LUEducation] E
ON      C.skCitizen = E.skCitizen AND E.skSchool = 24417;
1
  • 1
    @HHH . . . This should be covered in any book teaching SQL joins. Aug 26, 2014 at 11:58
3

If the left join fails to find a match in E, columns from E receive a null value. Then the where clause:

E.skSchool = 24417

Becomes:

null = 24417

Which is not true. So it will filter out all rows.

0

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