Difference between revisions of "Non-Equality Joins"

From rbachwiki
Jump to navigation Jump to search
(Created page with "'''With an equality join, the data value of a record stored in the common column for the first''' '''table must match the data value in the second table. However, in many case...")
 
Line 4: Line 4:
'''an equal sign—meaning there are no equivalent rows in the tables to be joined.'''
'''an equal sign—meaning there are no equivalent rows in the tables to be joined.'''


 
'''A non-equality join enables you to store a range’s minimum value in one column of a'''
'''record and the maximum value in another column. So instead of finding a column-to column'''
'''match, you can use a non-equality join to determine whether the item being shipped'''
'''falls between minimum and maximum ranges in the columns.'''


[[#Select Command|Back To Top]]-[[Main_Page| Home]] - [[Oracle_SQL|Category]]
[[#Select Command|Back To Top]]-[[Main_Page| Home]] - [[Oracle_SQL|Category]]

Revision as of 23:10, 23 October 2017

With an equality join, the data value of a record stored in the common column for the first table must match the data value in the second table. However, in many cases, there’s no exact match. A non-equality join is used when the related columns can’t be joined with an equal sign—meaning there are no equivalent rows in the tables to be joined.

A non-equality join enables you to store a range’s minimum value in one column of a record and the maximum value in another column. So instead of finding a column-to column match, you can use a non-equality join to determine whether the item being shipped falls between minimum and maximum ranges in the columns.

Back To Top- Home - Category