Hello,     This is a follow-up to this (yet) unanswered post on SE U&L: https://unix.stackexchange.com/q/696259/87656, which I'm cross-posting here. Don't hesitate to fire if it's the wrong place. With the following two simple files: |a.txt| |1 a 2 b 5 c | |b.txt| |2 x 4 y 5 z | The following command does not behave like expected: |$ join -a 1 -a 2 -e 0 a.txt b.txt 1 a 2 b x 4 y 5 c z | I would expect the option |-e 0| to fill up missing values with zeroes. However, the following does work: |$ join -a 1 -a 2 -e 0 -o auto a.txt b.txt 1 a 0 2 b x 4 0 y 5 c z | Reading documentation from |$ man join|, I see no connection between |-o| and |-e| that would make the above behaviour meaningful. Instead, I find it misleading that a useless |-o auto| needs to be inserted into my command for |-e 0| to work.. Is there an explanation, to be clarified in the manpage? Or is it a bug? (btw: $ join (GNU coreutils) 9.0 Copyright (C) 2021 Free Software Foundation, Inc. License GPLv3+: GNU GPL version 3 or later . This is free software: you are free to change and redistribute it. There is NO WARRANTY, to the extent permitted by law. Written by Mike Haertel. ) -- Iago-lito