On 15 Jan 2003 at 16:31, Marko Asplund wrote:
>
> i'm trying to port an existing application from Oracle8i to PostgreSQL but
> i'm having problems understanding a certain outer join query type used in
> the application. the query includes a normal outer join between two tables
> but also uses outer join syntax to join a table with a constant. here's a
> simplified version of the query:
>
> SELECT doc.id,doc.title,sub.user_id,sub.operation
> FROM document doc, document_subscription sub
> WHERE 6 = sub.user_id(+) AND sub.document_id(+) = doc.id;
>
> what does the '6 = sub.user_id(+)' condition exactly do in this query?
> how would this be translated SQL92 join syntax used by PostgreSQL?
>
> i've tried converting it to:
>
> SELECT doc.id,doc.title,sub.user_id,sub.operation
> FROM document doc LEFT OUTER JOIN document_subscription sub
> ON sub.document_id = doc.id
> WHERE (sub.user_id = 6 OR sub.user_id IS NULL);
>
> but this query is missing the rows in the documents table which have a
> corresponding document_subscription row with 'not user_id = 6'.
What about this:
SELECT doc.id,doc.title,sub.user_id,sub.operation FROM document doc LEFT OUTER JOIN document_subscription sub ON
sub.document_id= doc.id;
id | title | user_id | operation
----+-------+---------+----------- 1 | doc1 | 5 | op1 2 | doc2 | 5 | op2 2 | doc2 | 6 | op2 4 |
doc4 | |
(4 rows)
>
> here're also simplified definitions of the two tables used in the query
> and some test data:
Thanks for supplying the table and data. That makes things much
easier.
--
Dan Langille : http://www.langille.org/