HTML tutorial
CSS3 tutorial
Bootstrap tutorial
JavaScript tutorial
JQuery tutorial
AngularJS tutorial
React tutorial
NodeJS tutorial
PHP tutorial
Python tutorial
Python3 tutorial
Django tutorial
Linux tutorial
Docker tutorial
Ruby tutorial
Java tutorial
C tutorial
C ++ tutorial
Perl tutorial
JSP tutorial
Lua tutorial
Scala tutorial
Go tutorial
ASP.NET tutorial
C # tutorial
The RIGHT JOIN keyword returns all records from the right table (table2), and the matching records (if any) from the left table (table1)
The RIGHT JOIN
keyword returns all records from the right table (table2), and the
matching records (if any) from the left table (table1).
RIGHT JOIN Syntax
SELECT column_name(s)
FROM table1
RIGHT JOIN table2
ON table1.column_name = table2.column_name;
In this tutorial we will use the well-known Northwind sample database.
Below is a selection from the "Orders" table:
OrderID | CustomerID | EmployeeID | OrderDate | ShipperID |
---|---|---|---|---|
10308 | 2 | 7 | 1996-09-18 | 3 |
10309 | 37 | 3 | 1996-09-19 | 1 |
10310 | 77 | 8 | 1996-09-20 | 2 |
And a selection from the "Employees" table:
EmployeeID | LastName | FirstName | BirthDate | Photo |
---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Davolio | Nancy | 12/8/1968 | EmpID1.pic |
2 | Fuller | Andrew | 2/19/1952 | EmpID2.pic |
3 | Leverling | Janet | 8/30/1963 | EmpID3.pic |
The following SQL statement will return all employees, and any orders they might have placed:
SELECT Orders.OrderID, Employees.LastName, Employees.FirstName
FROM Orders
RIGHT JOIN Employees ON Orders.EmployeeID = Employees.EmployeeID
ORDER BY Orders.OrderID;
RIGHT JOIN
keyword returns all records from the
right table (Employees), even if there are no matches in the left table
(Orders).
Choose the correct JOIN
clause to select all the records from the Customers
table plus all the matches in the Orders
table.
SELECT * FROM Orders ON Orders.CustomerID=
Customers.CustomerID;