UNION ALL

Set

Combines results of two SELECT statements, keeping all duplicates.

Syntax

SELECT cols FROM t1 UNION ALL SELECT cols FROM t2

Example

SELECT city FROM customers
UNION ALL
SELECT city FROM suppliers;

About SQL UNION ALL

The UNION ALL keyword belongs to the Set category of SQL statements. Combines results of two SELECT statements, keeping all duplicates. Understanding this command is essential for any developer working with relational databases like PostgreSQL, MySQL, SQLite, or SQL Server.

SQL (Structured Query Language) is the standard language for managing and querying relational databases. The UNION ALL statement is supported across all major database systems, though specific syntax may vary slightly between PostgreSQL, MySQL, MariaDB, Oracle, SQL Server, and SQLite. Always consult your database's documentation for vendor-specific features and limitations.

Best practices for using UNION ALL: always test queries on a development database before running them in production, use parameterized queries to prevent SQL injection, and leverage EXPLAIN to understand query performance. For complex queries, consider using CTEs (Common Table Expressions) to improve readability and maintainability.

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