Practically every question that uses the classical Oracle join syntax (comma separated tables, join condition in the WHERE clause and (+) for outer join) as an example is subject of comments pointing out toward the usage of ANSI join syntax.
A few examples of such comments randomly selected with search on keywords "archaic join syntax", "modern ANSI join syntax" and similar are listed below:
Create a view and should not allow any data manipulation language operations
Select Max date column in a sql query, which is joined to other columns
Column ambiguously defined error. Working without pagination?
MySQL Error with SELECT * FROM (SELECT *...)
extractValue and right outer join - Oracle SQL
My understanding is that such comments are not compatible with the on-topic policy - even they are comments only and not questions. Such comments should be therefore processed based on the above mentioned policy i.e. should be removed.
Let me give some argumentation for my claim.
Opinion Based
Even that there are some questions concerning the usage of ASNI Join syntax on SO
Oracle Joins - Comparison between conventional syntax VS ANSI Syntax
What is difference between ANSI and non-ANSI joins, and which do you recommend?
Explicit JOINs vs Implicit joins?
a question with a title "Should I use Oracle ANSI Join Syntax?" would and should be closed as "opinion based".
And this is for sure an opinion based question. I use the ANSI syntax nearly in all cases, but I respect others that use the classic syntax.
There is of course an "official" opinion for outer joins from Oracle.
Transformation
Oracle uses rather complicated transformation from the ANSI syntax to the internal query form. This can be verified using DBMS_UTILITY.expand_sql_text
as illustrated here.
The main consequence is that many more query blocks (subqueries) are used than in a manually written equivalent in Oracle syntax.
Of course ANSI joins works in recent releases close to perfect, but some bugs are still open e.g. Bug 25342699 : WRONG RESULTS WITH ANSI JOIN USING AND IDENTICAL TABLE ALIASES - see the discussion here
Counterproductive Approach
It should be mentioned, that such good meant hints can be counterproductive.
The greatest advantage of ANSI written queries: the clean partitioning of the join conditions, the obvious inner and outer joins and separation of the filter predicates starts shining only in large queries.
The majority of queries in SO questions have two to three tables where the advantage is negligible or even leads to a more verbose syntax.
Positive Approach
My intention is of course not to suppress the propagation of the Oracle ANSI Join syntax on SO. On contrary this is important mostly above those who never heard about this form of queries.
But this should IMO be done in answers, where the ANSI syntax is used, possibly mentioning the difference and advantages with a point to the documentation link and not in the rather schoolmasterish comments.
Is my point and argumentation understandable or do I overlook something?