What is the difference between LEFT JOIN
and LEFT OUTER JOIN
?
As per the documentation: FROM (Transact-SQL):
<join_type> ::=
[ { INNER | { { LEFT | RIGHT | FULL } [ OUTER ] } } [ <join_hint> ] ]
JOIN
The keyword OUTER
is marked as optional (enclosed in square brackets). In this specific case, whether you specify OUTER
or not makes no difference. Note that while the other elements of the join clause is also marked as optional, leaving them out will make a difference.
For instance, the entire type-part of the JOIN
clause is optional, in which case the default is INNER
if you just specify JOIN
. In other words, this is legal:
SELECT *
FROM A JOIN B ON A.X = B.Y
Here's a list of equivalent syntaxes:
A LEFT JOIN B A LEFT OUTER JOIN B
A RIGHT JOIN B A RIGHT OUTER JOIN B
A FULL JOIN B A FULL OUTER JOIN B
A INNER JOIN B A JOIN B
Also take a look at the answer I left on this other SO question: SQL left join vs multiple tables on FROM line?.
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139
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12@LasseV.Karlsen wouldnt it be better to have
INNER JOIN
on the right and justJOIN
on the left in the list of equivalents? – nawfal May 1 '13 at 14:55 -
8@LasseV.Karlsen I just meant that the left side has the concise form and the right side has the expanded form. I thought it would make it coherent if you followed the same for
JOIN
s as well. – nawfal May 2 '13 at 7:40 -
33@Outlier That's your prerogative, but clearly 451 other people thought the answer was good. To be honest, if one answer says X and another answer says X and references the documentation, as well as copy the relevant pieces of the documentation into the answer, my vote goes to the second answer and that is why I write my answers the way I do. That someone claims X is not good. If you can prove X, that's better (not to slight sactiw's answer). But, its your prerogative to think whatever you want to. I question why you think it is pointless though, is the answer wrong in any way? – Lasse V. Karlsen Jul 20 '14 at 19:21
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9@Outlier And to be honest, if you don't feel like reading my "long" answers, then my answer was not for you. It is for everyone else coming here wondering about the same thing and want some background on why that is, and where to find more information, etc. Clearly you are the kind of guy that would want this answer: "None", but unfortunately this is not a legal answer here on Stack Overflow, nor should it be. – Lasse V. Karlsen Jul 20 '14 at 19:25
To answer your question there is no difference between LEFT JOIN and LEFT OUTER JOIN, they are exactly same that said...
At the top level there are mainly 3 types of joins:
- INNER
- OUTER
- CROSS
INNER JOIN - fetches data if present in both the tables.
OUTER JOIN are of 3 types:
LEFT OUTER JOIN
- fetches data if present in the left table.RIGHT OUTER JOIN
- fetches data if present in the right table.FULL OUTER JOIN
- fetches data if present in either of the two tables.
CROSS JOIN, as the name suggests, does
[n X m]
that joins everything to everything.
Similar to scenario where we simply lists the tables for joining (in theFROM
clause of theSELECT
statement), using commas to separate them.
Points to be noted:
- If you just mention
JOIN
then by default it is aINNER JOIN
. - An
OUTER
join has to beLEFT
|RIGHT
|FULL
you can not simply sayOUTER JOIN
. - You can drop
OUTER
keyword and just sayLEFT JOIN
orRIGHT JOIN
orFULL JOIN
.
For those who want to visualise these in a better way, please go to this link: A Visual Explanation of SQL Joins
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17Very good answer. It will be clearer if you say "LEFT OUTER JOIN - fetches all data from the left table with matching data from right, if preset." for 2.1 (and similar change for 2.2) – ssh Dec 27 '12 at 19:27
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1
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3Sorry if I'm necrobumping, but is
CROSS JOIN
the same asFULL JOIN
? – TechnicalTophat Jul 13 '16 at 13:11 -
9@RhysO no, CROSS JOIN is a Cartesian product i.e. CROSS JOIN of a table, having n rows, with a table, having m rows, will always give (n*m) rows while FULL OUTER JOIN of a table, having n rows, with a table, having m rows, will give at max (n+m) rows – sactiw Jul 13 '16 at 15:34
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1@sactiw consider to add a special note in your valuable answer about the difference between
Cross Join
andFull Outer Join
... in some way seems similar. – Manuel Jordan Oct 12 '19 at 14:51
What is the difference between left join and left outer join?
Nothing. LEFT JOIN
and LEFT OUTER JOIN
are equivalent.
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15erm hello! who voted this down? LEFT JOIN is teh same as LEFT OUTER JOIN. – Mitch Wheat Jan 2 '09 at 8:35
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7This is the case in Microsoft SQL Server, and any other SQL-compliant RDBMS. – Bill Karwin Jan 2 '09 at 8:41
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8It would be nice if you added a reference or explanation about why the
OUTER
is optional. – Zero3 Apr 12 '16 at 12:50 -
8
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6Thank you. The accepted answer had way too much information that left me more confused. This is exactly what I needed to know and answers the original question straight to the point. – Bacon Brad Aug 9 '18 at 20:36
I'm a PostgreSQL DBA, as far as I could understand the difference between outer or not outer joins difference is a topic that has considerable discussion all around the internet. Until today I never saw a difference between those two; So I went further and I try to find the difference between those. At the end I read the whole documentation about it and I found the answer for this,
So if you look on documentation (at least in PostgreSQL) you can find this phrase:
In another words,
LEFT JOIN
and LEFT OUTER JOIN
ARE THE SAME
RIGHT JOIN
and RIGHT OUTER JOIN
ARE THE SAME
I hope it can be a contribute for those who are still trying to find the answer.
Left Join
and Left Outer Join
are one and the same. The former is the shorthand for the latter. The same can be said about the Right Join
and Right Outer Join
relationship. The demonstration will illustrate the equality. Working examples of each query have been provided via SQL Fiddle. This tool will allow for hands on manipulation of the query.
Given
Results
Right Join and Right Outer Join
Results
I find it easier to think of Joins in the following order:
- CROSS JOIN - a Cartesian product of both tables. ALL joins begin here
- INNER JOIN - a CROSS JOIN with a filter added.
- OUTER JOIN - an INNER JOIN with missing elements (from either LEFT or RIGHT table) added afterward.
Until I figured out this (relatively) simple model, JOINS were always a bit more of a black art. Now they make perfect sense.
Hope this helps more than it confuses.
Why are LEFT/RIGHT and LEFT OUTER/RIGHT OUTER the same? Let's explain why this vocabulary. Understand that LEFT and RIGHT joins are specific cases of the OUTER join, and therefore couldn't be anything else than OUTER LEFT/OUTER RIGHT. The OUTER join is also called FULL OUTER as opposed to LEFT and RIGHT joins that are PARTIAL results of the OUTER join. Indeed:
Table A | Table B Table A | Table B Table A | Table B Table A | Table B
1 | 5 1 | 1 1 | 1 1 | 1
2 | 1 2 | 2 2 | 2 2 | 2
3 | 6 3 | null 3 | null - | -
4 | 2 4 | null 4 | null - | -
null | 5 - | - null | 5
null | 6 - | - null | 6
OUTER JOIN (FULL) LEFT OUTER (partial) RIGHT OUTER (partial)
It is now clear why those operations have aliases, as well as it is clear only 3 cases exist: INNER, OUTER, CROSS. With two sub-cases for the OUTER. The vocabulary, the way teachers explain this, as well as some answers above, often make it looks like there are lots of different types of join. But it's actually very simple.
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1"it is clear only 3 cases exist": interesting but flawed. Consider that an inner join is a specialised cross join (i.e. move join predicates to the where clause). Further consider that outer join isn't a join at all, rather is a union where are used nulls in place of 'missing' columns. Therefore, it could be argued that cross is the only join required. Note the current thinking in relational theory is that natural join satisfies all join requirements. Aside: can you explain if/how the vocabulary "
JOIN
impliesINNER JOIN
" fits with your reasoning for outer join vocab? – onedaywhen Jul 6 '16 at 10:39
To answer your question
In Sql Server joins syntax OUTER is optional
It is mentioned in msdn article : https://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/ms177634(v=sql.130).aspx
So following list shows join equivalent syntaxes with and without OUTER
LEFT OUTER JOIN => LEFT JOIN
RIGHT OUTER JOIN => RIGHT JOIN
FULL OUTER JOIN => FULL JOIN
Other equivalent syntaxes
INNER JOIN => JOIN
CROSS JOIN => ,
Strongly Recommend Dotnet Mob Artice : Joins in Sql Server
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3
There are only 3 joins:
- A) Cross Join = Cartesian (E.g: Table A, Table B)
- B) Inner Join = JOIN (E.g: Table A Join/Inner Join Table B)
C) Outer join:
There are three type of outer join 1) Left Outer Join = Left Join 2) Right Outer Join = Right Join 3) Full Outer Join = Full Join
Hope it'd help.
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1
There are mainly three types of JOIN
- Inner: fetches data, that are present in both tables
- Only JOIN means INNER JOIN
Outer: are of three types
- LEFT OUTER - - fetches data present only in left table & matching condition
- RIGHT OUTER - - fetches data present only in right table & matching condition
- FULL OUTER - - fetches data present any or both table
- (LEFT or RIGHT or FULL) OUTER JOIN can be written w/o writing "OUTER"
Cross Join: joins everything to everything
Syntactic sugar, makes it more obvious to the casual reader that the join isn't an inner one.
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2
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5tableA FULL OUTER JOIN tableB will give you three types of records: all records in tableA with no matching record in tableB, all records in tableB with no matching record in tableA, and all records in tableA with a matching record in tableB. – Dave DuPlantis Oct 5 '09 at 18:16
Just in the context of this question, I want to post the 2 'APPLY' operators as well:
JOINS:
INNER JOIN = JOIN
OUTER JOIN
LEFT OUTER JOIN = LEFT JOIN
RIGHT OUTER JOIN = RIGHT JOIN
FULL OUTER JOIN = FULL JOIN
CROSS JOIN
SELF-JOIN: This is not exactly a separate type of join. This is basically joining a table to itself using one of the above joins. But I felt it is worth mentioning in the context JOIN discussions as you will hear this term from many in the SQL Developer community.
APPLY:
- CROSS APPLY -- Similar to INNER JOIN (But has added advantage of being able to compute something in the Right table for each row of the Left table and would return only the matching rows)
- OUTER APPLY -- Similar to LEFT OUTER JOIN (But has added advantage of being able to compute something in the Right table for each row of the Left table and would return all the rows from the Left table irrespective of a match on the Right table)
https://www.mssqltips.com/sqlservertip/1958/sql-server-cross-apply-and-outer-apply/
https://sqlhints.com/2016/10/23/outer-apply-in-sql-server/
Real life example, when to use OUTER / CROSS APPLY in SQL
I find APPLY operator very beneficial as they give better performance than having to do the same computation in a subquery. They are also replacement of many Analytical functions in older versions of SQL Server. That is why I believe that after being comfortable with JOINS, one SQL developer should try to learn the APPLY operators next.
OUTER
keyword is optional. – jarlh Jun 2 '16 at 14:02