UNION
, INTERSECT
, EXCEPT
) #The results of two queries can be combined using the set operations union, intersection, and difference. The syntax is
query1
UNION [ALL]query2
query1
INTERSECT [ALL]query2
query1
EXCEPT [ALL]query2
where query1
and
query2
are queries that can use any of
the features discussed up to this point.
UNION
effectively appends the result of
query2
to the result of
query1
(although there is no guarantee
that this is the order in which the rows are actually returned).
Furthermore, it eliminates duplicate rows from its result, in the same
way as DISTINCT
, unless UNION ALL
is used.
INTERSECT
returns all rows that are both in the result
of query1
and in the result of
query2
. Duplicate rows are eliminated
unless INTERSECT ALL
is used.
EXCEPT
returns all rows that are in the result of
query1
but not in the result of
query2
. (This is sometimes called the
difference between two queries.) Again, duplicates
are eliminated unless EXCEPT ALL
is used.
In order to calculate the union, intersection, or difference of two queries, the two queries must be “union compatible”, which means that they return the same number of columns and the corresponding columns have compatible data types, as described in Section 10.5.
Set operations can be combined, for example
query1
UNIONquery2
EXCEPTquery3
which is equivalent to
(query1
UNIONquery2
) EXCEPTquery3
As shown here, you can use parentheses to control the order of
evaluation. Without parentheses, UNION
and EXCEPT
associate left-to-right,
but INTERSECT
binds more tightly than those two
operators. Thus
query1
UNIONquery2
INTERSECTquery3
means
query1
UNION (query2
INTERSECTquery3
)
You can also surround an individual query
with parentheses. This is important if
the query
needs to use any of the clauses
discussed in following sections, such as LIMIT
.
Without parentheses, you'll get a syntax error, or else the clause will
be understood as applying to the output of the set operation rather
than one of its inputs. For example,
SELECT a FROM b UNION SELECT x FROM y LIMIT 10
is accepted, but it means
(SELECT a FROM b UNION SELECT x FROM y) LIMIT 10
not
SELECT a FROM b UNION (SELECT x FROM y LIMIT 10)