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What is an SQL JOIN?

It took me quite some time before I could reason efficiently about SQL JOINs. And I must admit, the set theory diagrams never helped me really understand JOINs in SQL. So today, I want to help you understand JOINs in a different way, hoping to make the concept click at once for you too!

As we saw in the previous article What is an SQL relation?, in SQL a relation is a collection of objects, all sharing the same definition. SQL introduces relations and operators to compose them.

In mathematics, you can define a new function H as being the result of applying F to some object, and then G to the result of the previous operation. We then note that H = F ∘ G and it means that H(x) = F(G(x)). Functional programing languages all have a way to express this kind of composition. This allows to build a new function from simpler ones.

In SQL we compose relations: we build a new relation from two existing ones. Remember, a relation is a collection of objects. How would you compose two collections of objects together to form a new collection of objects?

There aren’t that many ways to do it. Both input collections have objects of certain properties, or attributes. You typically want to build a new collection of objects that would have properties from the two collections, right?

That’s it. That’s a SQL JOIN.

Let’s see an example, taken from my book The Art of PostgreSQL:

-- name: list-albums-by-artist
-- List the album titles and duration of a given artist
  select album.title as album,
         sum(milliseconds) * interval '1 ms' as duration
    from album
         join artist using(artistid)
         left join track using(albumid)
   where artist.name = 'Red Hot Chili Peppers'
group by album
order by album;

In this query we build a new relation that is a composition of the objects found in the collection ALBUM with the objects found in the collection ARTIST. The result is a new collection of objects where we have both the properties of the album and the artist, and we enrich albums with the artist of the same artistid.

This JOIN that you see in the query, that’s all it means. For each album, we add the information from the artist that shares the same artistid. In that case, we expect a single artist per album, so that’s even easier.

Next, we have a LEFT JOIN that composes this new relation with the collection of track objects. We build a new collection of objects that have all the properties of the ALBUM, the ARTIST and the TRACK.

I will dive in the other parts of the query in other articles! Here’s the new relation we have defined with the SQL query above:

┌───────────────────────┬──────────────────────────────┐
│         album         │           duration           │
├───────────────────────┼──────────────────────────────┤
│ Blood Sugar Sex Magik │ @ 1 hour 13 mins 57.073 secs │
By The Way            │ @ 1 hour 8 mins 49.951 secs  │
│ Californication       │ @ 56 mins 25.461 secs        │
└───────────────────────┴──────────────────────────────┘
(3 rows)

Check out my book The Art of PostgreSQL where you can learn how to put SQL to good use when coding your application!

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