Vous n'avez besoin d'un alias que lorsque vous faites référence à une colonne qui n'est pas définie de manière unique. Cela signifie que la colonne existe dans plusieurs tables/tables dérivées. Une référence peut se trouver dans l'instruction select ou dans une jointure. Si toutes les colonnes sont uniques, vous n'avez pas besoin d'alias.
Je préfère utiliser des alias tout le temps pour plus de clarté et parce que cela aide avec Intellisense en PL/SQL.
--ALIAS needed, because the 'a' column referenced is not unique
--this will throw an error
select a, a, b, c
from (select 'A1' as a, 'B1' as b, 'C1' as c from dual),
(select 'A2' as a from dual);
--this will not throw an error
select t1.a, t2.a, b,c
from (select 'A1' as a, 'B1' as b, 'C1' as c from dual) t1,
(select 'A2' as a from dual) t2;
;
--ALIAS not needed for join, because all referenced columns are unique
select a, b, c, d, e, f
from (select 'A' as a, 'B' as b, 'C' as c from dual)
join (select 'D' as d, 'E' as e, 'F' as f from dual)
on a = d;
--ALIAS needed for join, because the 'x' column referenced is not unique
--this will throw an error
select a
from (select 'A' as a, 'B' as b, 'C' as c, 'X' as x from dual)
join (select 'D' as d, 'E' as e, 'F' as f, 'X' as x from dual)
on x = x;
--this will not throw an error
select a
from (select 'A' as a, 'B' as b, 'C' as c, 'X' as x from dual) t1
join (select 'D' as d, 'E' as e, 'F' as f, 'X' as x from dual) t2
on t1.x = t2.x;