Relational Algebra - Cartesian Product vs Natural Join?

A natural join, as I understand it, is a projected, filtered Cartesian product:

  • You take the Cartesian product, then
  • select it, so that the values in columns of the same name have the same value, and
  • project it, so that all columns have distinct names.

Under this assumption, your answer is isomorphic to the actual answer.

To see this, you might want to expand the natural join to the above sequence of operators, and float them around using the laws of relational algebra. You'll see that the projection disappears due to the projection to name, and the selection criterion is fused with the selection above. You'll end up with exactly the same tree as the actual answer, even though you never changed the meaning of your own answer!


I can think of one reason why your lecturer uses these concepts interchangeably: your lecturer wants you to understand that these concepts can be used interchangeably, because "the natural join is just a shortcut" (though that's debatable).


Cartesian product is just a special case of natural join where the joined relations don't have any attribute names in common. In Codd's original algebra renaming was a separate operation altogether. To obtain a true cartesian product of two relations that have some attributes in common you would have to rename those attributes before doing the (natural) join.

In the interests of brevity the renamings are sometimes left out of written examples and the product symbol used instead. Unfortunately this obscures the important point, that there is only one kind of join.