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Home/ Questions/Q 666507
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 13, 20262026-05-13T23:49:34+00:00 2026-05-13T23:49:34+00:00

I’d like to know if having to conditionals when using a JOIN keyword is

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I’d like to know if having to conditionals when using a JOIN keyword is a good practice.

I’m trying to filter this resultset by date but I’m unable to get all the branches listed even if there’s no expense or income for a date using a WHERE clause. Is there a better way of doing this, if so how?

SELECT
  Branches.Name
  ,SUM(Expenses.Amount) AS Expenses
  ,SUM(Incomes.Amount) AS Incomes
FROM
  Branches
  LEFT JOIN Expenses
    ON Branches.Id = Expenses.BranchId AND Expenses.Date = '3/11/2010'
  LEFT JOIN Incomes
    ON Branches.Id = Incomes.BranchId AND Incomes.Date = '3/11/2010'
GROUP BY Branches.Name
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1 Answer

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-13T23:49:34+00:00Added an answer on May 13, 2026 at 11:49 pm

    Why not? Even more!
    OUTER JOIN has very specific trick about these two conditions!
    INNER JOIN is tolerant to recombination, for example following are equivalent:

    INNER JOIN Expenses
        ON Branches.Id = Expenses.BranchId
    WHERE
        Expenses.Date = '3/11/2010'
    

    via:

    INNER JOIN Expenses
        ON Branches.Id = Expenses.BranchId AND Expenses.Date = '3/11/2010'
    

    BUT!!! For OUTER JOIN you MUST specify exactly two conditions inside ON, since WHERE would treat result as INNER JOIN

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