Introduction à Snowflake SQL
George Boorman
Senior Curriculum Manager, DataCamp

NATURAL JOIN associe automatiquement les colonnes et élimine les doublons.Syntaxe :
SELECT ...
FROM <table_one> [
{
| NATURAL [ { LEFT | RIGHT | FULL } [ OUTER ] ]
}
]
JOIN <table_two>
[ ... ]
NATURAL JOINSELECT *
FROM pizzas AS p
JOIN pizza_type AS t
ON t.pizza_type_id = p.pizza_type_id

NATURAL JOINSELECT *
FROM pizzas AS p
NATURAL JOIN pizza_type AS t

❌ NOT AUTORISÉS ❌
select *
FROM pizzas AS p
NATURAL JOIN pizza_type AS t
ON t.pizza_type_id = p.pizza_type_id

$$
✅ AUTORISÉS ✅
WHERESELECT *
FROM pizzas AS p
NATURAL JOIN pizza_type AS t
WHERE pizza_type_id = 'bbq_ckn'
LATERAL JOIN : permet à une sous-requête dans des colonnes de référence FROM provenant de tables ou de vues précédentes.Syntaxe :
SELECT ...
FROM <left_hand_expression> , --
LATERAL
(<right_hand_expression>)
left_hand_expression - Table, vue ou sous-requête
right_hand_expression - Vue en ligne ou sous-requête
SELECT p.pizza_id, lat.name, lat.category FROM pizzas AS p,LATERAL -- Keyword LATERAL ( SELECT * FROM pizza_type AS t-- Referencing outer query column: p.pizza_type_id WHERE p.pizza_type_id = t.pizza_type_id) AS lat
SELECT
*
FROM orders AS o,
LATERAL (
-- Subquery calculating total_spent
SELECT
SUM(p.price * od.quantity) AS total_spent
FROM order_details AS od
JOIN pizzas AS p
ON od.pizza_id = p.pizza_id
WHERE o.order_id = od.order_id
) AS t
ORDER BY o.order_id
Introduction à Snowflake SQL