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Set operators

UNION and UNION ALL

The UNION operator combines the result sets of 2 or more SELECT statements and removes duplicate rows between the various SELECT statements.

The UNION ALL operator combines the result sets of 2 or more SELECT statements and returns all rows from the query. It does not remove duplicate rows between the various SELECT statements.

Each SELECT statement within the UNION operator must have the same number of fields in the result sets with similar data types.

The syntax for the UNION ALL operator is as follows:

SELECT expression1, expression2, ... expression_n
FROM tables
[WHERE conditions]
UNION ALL
SELECT expression1, expression2, ... expression_n
FROM tables
[WHERE conditions];

expression1, expression2, ... expression_n are the columns or calculations you wish to retrieve.

tables are the tables that you wish to retrieve records from. There must be at least one table listed in the FROM clause.

WHERE conditions are optional. These conditions must be met for the records to be selected.

Suppose that we have a table,points_scored_current_week, that consists of these columns: id, first_half, and second_half.

idfirst_halfsecond_half
11020

Next, suppose that we have a second table, points_scored_last_week, that consists of these columns: id, first_half, and second_half.

idfirst_halfsecond_half
11020

Here is an example that uses the UNION operator:

SELECT * 
FROM points_scored_current_week
UNION
SELECT *
FROM points_scored_last_week;

The result looks like this:

|  id   |first_half|second_half|
|-------|----------+-----------+
| 1 | 10 | 20 |

Here is an example that uses the UNION ALL operator:

SELECT * 
FROM points_scored_current_week
UNION ALL
SELECT *
FROM points_scored_last_week;

The result looks like this:

|  id   |first_half|second_half|
|-------|----------+-----------+
| 1 | 10 | 20 |
| 2 | 10 | 20 |
note

UNION and UNION ALL operators are both supported for streaming queries.

INTERSECT

The INTERSECT operator combines the result sets of 2 or more SELECT statements and returns only the rows that are common to all the SELECT statements. It removes duplicate rows from the final result set.

Each SELECT statement within the INTERSECT operator must have the same number of fields in the result sets with similar data types.

The syntax for the INTERSECT operator is as follows:

SELECT expression1, expression2, ... expression_n
FROM tables
[WHERE conditions]
INTERSECT
SELECT expression1, expression2, ... expression_n
FROM tables
[WHERE conditions];

expression1, expression2, ... expression_n are the columns or calculations you wish to retrieve.

tables are the tables that you wish to retrieve records from. There must be at least one table listed in the FROM clause.

WHERE conditions are optional. These conditions must be met for the records to be selected.

Suppose that we have a table,points_scored_current_week, that consists of these columns: id, first_half, and second_half.

idfirst_halfsecond_half
11020

Next, suppose that we have a second table, points_scored_last_week, that consists of these columns: id, first_half, and second_half.

idfirst_halfsecond_half
11020

Here is an example that uses the INTERSECT operator:

SELECT * 
FROM points_scored_current_week
INTERSECT
SELECT *
FROM points_scored_last_week;

The result looks like this:

|  id   |first_half|second_half|
|-------|----------+-----------+
| 1 | 10 | 20 |

In this case, the INTERSECT operator returned the rows that are common to both the points_scored_current_week and points_scored_last_week tables. If there were no common rows, the INTERSECT operator would return an empty set.

note

INTERSECT operator is supported for streaming queries.

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