In that diagram they omit the word 'outer' from that description, but you should read it as LEFT OUTER JOIN
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The table to the "left" of the SQL statement (which is going to be the table after the FROM, and in this case, table A) will have every row returned whether or not there is a corresponding row in Table B that matches the JOIN condition.
This is the difference between an inner join and an outer join. Inner joins only return a row where there is a match on the join condition, whereas, a LEFT OUTER join returns the same rows returned by an INNER join, as well as a ROW for any rows in the LEFT table that don't satisfy the JOIN condition. For those rows in the LEFT table that don't JOIN to one or more rows in Table B, the columns of table B that might be specified in the SELECT will be NULL.
You can see that this property of unmatched LEFT rows having NULL values for table B columns is used in the example directly below to filter out any rows derived from a successful join to table B.