What is the difference between UNION and UNION ALL?

SqlUnionUnion All

Sql Problem Overview


What is the difference between UNION and UNION ALL?

Sql Solutions


Solution 1 - Sql

UNION removes duplicate records (where all columns in the results are the same), UNION ALL does not.

There is a performance hit when using UNION instead of UNION ALL, since the database server must do additional work to remove the duplicate rows, but usually you do not want the duplicates (especially when developing reports).

To identify duplicates, records must be comparable types as well as compatible types. This will depend on the SQL system. For example the system may truncate all long text fields to make short text fields for comparison (MS Jet), or may refuse to compare binary fields (ORACLE)

UNION Example:
SELECT 'foo' AS bar UNION SELECT 'foo' AS bar

Result:

+-----+
| bar |
+-----+
| foo |
+-----+
1 row in set (0.00 sec)
UNION ALL example:
SELECT 'foo' AS bar UNION ALL SELECT 'foo' AS bar

Result:

+-----+
| bar |
+-----+
| foo |
| foo |
+-----+
2 rows in set (0.00 sec)

Solution 2 - Sql

Both UNION and UNION ALL concatenate the result of two different SQLs. They differ in the way they handle duplicates.

  • UNION performs a DISTINCT on the result set, eliminating any duplicate rows.

  • UNION ALL does not remove duplicates, and it therefore faster than UNION.

> Note: While using this commands all selected columns need to be of the same data type.

Example: If we have two tables, 1) Employee and 2) Customer

  1. Employee table data:

enter image description here

  1. Customer table data:

enter image description here

  1. UNION Example (It removes all duplicate records):

enter image description here

  1. UNION ALL Example (It just concatenate records, not eliminate duplicates, so it is faster than UNION):

enter image description here

Solution 3 - Sql

UNION removes duplicates, whereas UNION ALL does not.

In order to remove duplicates the result set must be sorted, and this may have an impact on the performance of the UNION, depending on the volume of data being sorted, and the settings of various RDBMS parameters ( For Oracle PGA_AGGREGATE_TARGET with WORKAREA_SIZE_POLICY=AUTO or SORT_AREA_SIZE and SOR_AREA_RETAINED_SIZE if WORKAREA_SIZE_POLICY=MANUAL ).

Basically, the sort is faster if it can be carried out in memory, but the same caveat about the volume of data applies.

Of course, if you need data returned without duplicates then you must use UNION, depending on the source of your data.

I would have commented on the first post to qualify the "is much less performant" comment, but have insufficient reputation (points) to do so.

Solution 4 - Sql

In ORACLE: UNION does not support BLOB (or CLOB) column types, UNION ALL does.

Solution 5 - Sql

> The basic difference between UNION and UNION ALL is union operation eliminates the duplicated rows from the result set but union all returns all rows after joining.

from http://zengin.wordpress.com/2007/07/31/union-vs-union-all/

Solution 6 - Sql

UNION
The UNION command is used to select related information from two tables, much like the JOIN command. However, when using the UNION command all selected columns need to be of the same data type. With UNION, only distinct values are selected.

UNION ALL
The UNION ALL command is equal to the UNION command, except that UNION ALL selects all values.

The difference between Union and Union all is that Union all will not eliminate duplicate rows, instead it just pulls all rows from all tables fitting your query specifics and combines them into a table.

A UNION statement effectively does a SELECT DISTINCT on the results set. If you know that all the records returned are unique from your union, use UNION ALL instead, it gives faster results.

Solution 7 - Sql

You can avoid duplicates and still run much faster than UNION DISTINCT (which is actually same as UNION) by running query like this:

SELECT * FROM mytable WHERE a=X UNION ALL SELECT * FROM mytable WHERE b=Y AND a!=X

Notice the AND a!=X part. This is much faster then UNION.

Solution 8 - Sql

Just to add my two cents to the discussion here: one could understand the UNION operator as a pure, SET-oriented UNION - e.g. set A={2,4,6,8}, set B={1,2,3,4}, A UNION B = {1,2,3,4,6,8}

When dealing with sets, you would not want numbers 2 and 4 appearing twice, as an element either is or is not in a set.

In the world of SQL, though, you might want to see all the elements from the two sets together in one "bag" {2,4,6,8,1,2,3,4}. And for this purpose T-SQL offers the operator UNION ALL.

Solution 9 - Sql

UNION - results in distinct records

while

UNION ALL - results in all the records including duplicates.

Both are blocking operators and hence I personally prefer using JOINS over Blocking Operators(UNION, INTERSECT, UNION ALL etc. ) anytime.

To illustrate why Union operation performs poorly in comparison to Union All checkout the following example.

CREATE TABLE #T1 (data VARCHAR(10))

INSERT INTO #T1
SELECT 'abc'
UNION ALL
SELECT 'bcd'
UNION ALL
SELECT 'cde'
UNION ALL
SELECT 'def'
UNION ALL
SELECT 'efg'


CREATE TABLE #T2 (data VARCHAR(10))

INSERT INTO #T2
SELECT 'abc'
UNION ALL
SELECT 'cde'
UNION ALL
SELECT 'efg'

enter image description here

Following are results of UNION ALL and UNION operations.

enter image description here

A UNION statement effectively does a SELECT DISTINCT on the results set. If you know that all the records returned are unique from your union, use UNION ALL instead, it gives faster results.

Using UNION results in Distinct Sort operations in the Execution Plan. Proof to prove this statement is shown below:

enter image description here

Solution 10 - Sql

> Not sure that it matters which database

UNION and UNION ALL should work on all SQL Servers.

You should avoid of unnecessary UNIONs they are huge performance leak. As a rule of thumb use UNION ALL if you are not sure which to use.

Solution 11 - Sql

It is good to understand with a Venn diagramm.

here is the link to the source. There is a good description.

enter image description here

Solution 12 - Sql

union is used to select distinct values from two tables where as union all is used to select all values including duplicates from the tables

Solution 13 - Sql

(From Microsoft SQL Server Book Online)

UNION [ALL] > Specifies that multiple result sets are to be combined and returned as a single result set.

ALL > Incorporates all rows into the results. This includes duplicates. If not specified, duplicate rows are removed.

UNION will take too long as a duplicate rows finding like DISTINCT is applied on the results.

SELECT * FROM Table1
UNION
SELECT * FROM Table2

is equivalent of:

SELECT DISTINCT * FROM (
    SELECT * FROM Table1
    UNION ALL
    SELECT * FROM Table2) DT

> A side effect of applying DISTINCT over results is a sorting operation on results.

UNION ALL results will be shown as arbitrary order on results But UNION results will be shown as ORDER BY 1, 2, 3, ..., n (n = column number of Tables) applied on results. You can see this side effect when you don't have any duplicate row.

Solution 14 - Sql

I add an example,

UNION, it is merging with distinct --> slower, because it need comparing (In Oracle SQL developer, choose query, press F10 to see cost analysis).

UNION ALL, it is merging without distinct --> faster.

SELECT to_date(sysdate, 'yyyy-mm-dd') FROM dual
UNION
SELECT to_date(sysdate, 'yyyy-mm-dd') FROM dual;

and

SELECT to_date(sysdate, 'yyyy-mm-dd') FROM dual
UNION ALL
SELECT to_date(sysdate, 'yyyy-mm-dd') FROM dual;

Solution 15 - Sql

UNION merges the contents of two structurally-compatible tables into a single combined table.

  • Difference:

The difference between UNION and UNION ALL is that UNION will omit duplicate records whereas UNION ALL will include duplicate records.

Union Result set is sorted in ascending order whereas UNION ALL Result set is not sorted

UNION performs a DISTINCT on its Result set so it will eliminate any duplicate rows. Whereas UNION ALL won't remove duplicates and therefore it is faster than UNION.*

Note: The performance of UNION ALL will typically be better than UNION, since UNION requires the server to do the additional work of removing any duplicates. So, in cases where it is certain that there will not be any duplicates, or where having duplicates is not a problem, use of UNION ALL would be recommended for performance reasons.

Solution 16 - Sql

Suppose that you have two table Teacher & Student

Both have 4 Column with different Name like this

Teacher - ID(int), Name(varchar(50)), Address(varchar(50)), PositionID(varchar(50))

enter image description here

Student- ID(int), Name(varchar(50)), Email(varchar(50)), PositionID(int)

enter image description here

You can apply UNION or UNION ALL for those two table which have same number of columns. But they have different name or data type.

When you apply UNION operation on 2 tables, it neglects all duplicate entries(all columns value of row in a table is same of another table). Like this

SELECT * FROM Student
UNION
SELECT * FROM Teacher

the result will be

enter image description here

When you apply UNION ALL operation on 2 tables, it returns all entries with duplicate(if there is any difference between any column value of a row in 2 tables). Like this

SELECT * FROM Student
UNION ALL
SELECT * FROM Teacher

Output enter image description here

Performance:

Obviously UNION ALL performance is better that UNION as they do additional task to remove the duplicate values. You can check that from Execution Estimated Time by press ctrl+L at MSSQL

Solution 17 - Sql

One more thing i would like to add-

Union:- Result set is sorted in ascending order.

Union All:- Result set is not sorted. two Query output just gets appended.

Solution 18 - Sql

UNION and UNION ALL used to combine two or more query results.

UNION command selects distinct and related information from two tables which will eliminates duplicate rows.

On the other hand, UNION ALL command selects all the values from both the tables, which displays all rows.

Solution 19 - Sql

UNION removes duplicate records in other hand UNION ALL does not. But one need to check the bulk of data that is going to be processed and the column and data type must be same.

since union internally uses "distinct" behavior to select the rows hence it is more costly in terms of time and performance. like

select project_id from t_project
union
select project_id from t_project_contact  

this gives me 2020 records

on other hand

select project_id from t_project
union all
select project_id from t_project_contact

gives me more than 17402 rows

on precedence perspective both has same precedence.

Solution 20 - Sql

If there is no ORDER BY, a UNION ALL may bring rows back as it goes, whereas a UNION would make you wait until the very end of the query before giving you the whole result set at once. This can make a difference in a time-out situation - a UNION ALL keeps the connection alive, as it were.

So if you have a time-out issue, and there's no sorting, and duplicates aren't an issue, UNION ALL may be rather helpful.

Solution 21 - Sql

Important! Difference between Oracle and Mysql: Let's say that t1 t2 don't have duplicate rows between them but they have duplicate rows individual. Example: t1 has sales from 2017 and t2 from 2018

SELECT T1.YEAR, T1.PRODUCT FROM T1

UNION ALL

SELECT T2.YEAR, T2.PRODUCT FROM T2

In ORACLE UNION ALL fetches all rows from both tables. The same will occur in MySQL.

However:

SELECT T1.YEAR, T1.PRODUCT FROM T1

UNION

SELECT T2.YEAR, T2.PRODUCT FROM T2

In ORACLE, UNION fetches all rows from both tables because there are no duplicate values between t1 and t2. On the other hand in MySQL the resultset will have fewer rows because there will be duplicate rows within table t1 and also within table t2!

Solution 22 - Sql

UNION ALL also works on more data types as well. For example when trying to union spatial data types. For example:

select a.SHAPE from tableA a
union
select b.SHAPE from tableB b

will throw

The data type geometry cannot be used as an operand to the UNION, INTERSECT or EXCEPT operators because it is not comparable.

However union all will not.

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