June 10, 2011 at 1:04 pm
I have a question on left outer join and subquery as follows:
Below is the code that gave me what I wanted:
---------------------------------
Code 1:
select distinct stpidm
, styear
, stterm
, stcyt
, MIN(dadate)
, shrtgpa_term_code
, sum(shrtgpa_hours_earned)
from oiradm.student
, saturn.shrtgpa
, oiradm.degrees_awarded
where st1sttime = 'F'
and stlevel = 'UG'
and ststsch = 'AS'
and styear >= '2003'
and styear <= '2008'
and stterm = '40'
and stpidm = dapidm(+)
and dalevel(+) = 'U'
and daschool(+) = 'AS'
and stpidm = shrtgpa_pidm(+)
and shrtgpa_levl_code(+) = 'UG'
group by stpidm, styear, stterm, stcyt, shrtgpa_term_code
---------------------------------
Now, instead of using MIN function for "dadate" as above, I want to use a subquery:
---------------------------------
Code 2:
select distinct stpidm
, styear
, stterm
, stcyt
, dadate
, shrtgpa_term_code
, sum(shrtgpa_hours_earned)
from oiradm.student
, saturn.shrtgpa
, oiradm.degrees_awarded A
where st1sttime = 'F'
and stlevel = 'UG'
and ststsch = 'AS'
and styear >= '2003'
and styear <= '2008'
and stterm = '40'
and stpidm = dapidm(+)
and dalevel(+) = 'U'
and daschool(+) = 'AS'
and dadate IN
(
select min(B.dadate)
from oiradm.degrees_awarded B
where A.dapidm = B.dapidm
and A.dalevel = B.dalevel
and A.daschool = B.daschool
and A.dalevel = 'U'
and A.daschool = 'AS'
and B.dalevel = 'U'
and B.daschool = 'AS'
group by B.dapidm, B.dalevel, B.daschool
)
and stpidm = shrtgpa_pidm(+)
and shrtgpa_levl_code(+) = 'UG'
group by stpidm, styear, stterm, stcyt, dadate, shrtgpa_term_code
---------------------------------
However, Code 2 only gives me records that exist in both tables "oiradm.student" and "oiradm.degrees_awarded". So I think I need to put (+) next to the variable "dadate" above (in bold) to complete a left outer join. I tried it, got an error message, and still do not know how to fix it. Do you have any ideas on how to make Code 2 work?
Any of your suggestions are much appreciated.
June 10, 2011 at 1:46 pm
You're performing either ANSI 89 style joins. Instead, you should use the ANSI 92 style
SELECT ...
FROM TABLEA AS a
JOIN TABLEB AS b
ON a.ID = b.ID
LEFT JOIN TABLEC AS c
ON b.NewID = c.NewID
LEFT JOIN ...
WHERE...
This way you separate JOIN criteria from the filtering operations of the WHERE clause.
"The credit belongs to the man who is actually in the arena, whose face is marred by dust and sweat and blood"
- Theodore Roosevelt
Author of:
SQL Server Execution Plans
SQL Server Query Performance Tuning
June 13, 2011 at 10:10 am
Dear Grant
Thank you very much for your help.
I tried to rerun the codes as you instructed (please see Code 3 below). However, it still gave me only records that existed in both "oiradm.degrees_awarded" and "oiradm.student" tables although I had specified a right join. What I needed was all records from "oiradm.student" table (with filter conditions). Do you have any ideas on how I should modify the codes? Thank you very much.
-----------------------------
Code 3
select distinct stpidm
, styear
, stterm
, stcyt
, dadate
, shrtgpa_term_code
, sum(shrtgpa_hours_earned)
from oiradm.degrees_awarded A RIGHT JOIN oiradm.student ON dapidm = stpidm
LEFT JOIN saturn.shrtgpa ON stpidm = shrtgpa_pidm
where st1sttime = 'F'
and stlevel = 'UG'
and ststsch = 'AS'
and styear >= '2003'
and styear <= '2008'
and stterm = '40'
and dalevel = 'U'
and daschool = 'AS'
and dadate IN
(select min(B.dadate)
from oiradm.degrees_awarded B
where A.dapidm = B.dapidm
and A.dalevel = B.dalevel
and A.daschool = B.daschool
and A.dalevel = 'U'
and A.daschool = 'AS'
and B.dalevel = 'U'
and B.daschool = 'AS'
group by B.dapidm, B.dalevel, B.daschool
)
and shrtgpa_levl_code = 'UG'
group by stpidm, styear, stterm, stcyt, dadate, shrtgpa_term_code
-----------------------------
June 13, 2011 at 11:29 am
You need to filter on the join if selecting only specific records in the left join.
I.e.
Select a.*, b.*
From a
left join b on a.id = b.id
and b.date >= '06-01-2011'
where a.name = 'smith'
Another option is to use a CTE to filter the data first for the saturn.shrtgpa table and then left join to the CTE instead.
June 13, 2011 at 12:31 pm
Yeah, Dan has it right. If you filter on columns from the OUTER table in the WHERE clause you will get an INNER JOIN. The trick is to move those criteria from the WHERE to the JOIN to fix that issue.
"The credit belongs to the man who is actually in the arena, whose face is marred by dust and sweat and blood"
- Theodore Roosevelt
Author of:
SQL Server Execution Plans
SQL Server Query Performance Tuning
June 13, 2011 at 4:20 pm
Dear DAN and GRANT
Thank you for the instructions. I followed them, and finally I was successful in retrieving the data I wanted. I have another 2 questions as follows:
1. Can you tell me why I would get an INNER JOIN if I filtered on columns from the OUTER table in the WHERE clause?
2. I am reading the book "Mastering Oracle SQL" (by Sanjay Mishra and Alan Beaulieu), but it does not mention the above issue. Can you suggest me a book that discusses in much detail different issues related to joins?
Thank you
June 13, 2011 at 4:58 pm
I can answer one of these. What I officially know about Oracle you can fit in a thimble and still pour a shot into.
todinhkhoi (6/13/2011)
1. Can you tell me why I would get an INNER JOIN if I filtered on columns from the OUTER table in the WHERE clause?
It's the operational order.
First, think about the join itself: (tbl1: 1/2/3/4, tbl2: 1/2)
1 1
2 2
3 NULL
4 NULL
Now, if you where clause BEFORE you join (thus, in the on clause) and remove line 2 via some tbl2.attribute = 'x':
1 1
2 NULL
3 NULL
4 NULL
If you do it in the WHERE clause:
1 1
The where clause happens (logically, not necessarily physically) after the joins complete. The ON clause is a direct descriptor as to what to take from a table during the join mechanic. The OUTER JOIN needed to have the NULL side restricted without restricting the full query result.
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June 13, 2011 at 5:00 pm
todinhkhoi (6/13/2011)
Dear DAN and GRANTThank you for the instructions. I followed them, and finally I was successful in retrieving the data I wanted. I have another 2 questions as follows:
1. Can you tell me why I would get an INNER JOIN if I filtered on columns from the OUTER table in the WHERE clause?
2. I am reading the book "Mastering Oracle SQL" (by Sanjay Mishra and Alan Beaulieu), but it does not mention the above issue. Can you suggest me a book that discusses in much detail different issues related to joins?
Thank you
You're posting in a SQL Server forum, so I would assume you're learning TSQL, not PLSQL. That Oracle book will steer you wrong. Itzik Ben-Gan has a book called, I think, Introducing TSQL-Querying. I'd get that.
"The credit belongs to the man who is actually in the arena, whose face is marred by dust and sweat and blood"
- Theodore Roosevelt
Author of:
SQL Server Execution Plans
SQL Server Query Performance Tuning
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