I must be missing something. Why wouldn't you just do:

SELECT distinct institution
FROM renewals
WHERE snap_date >= '2011-07-01'


On Wed, Sep 28, 2011 at 9:41 AM, Ken Irwin <kir...@wittenberg.edu> wrote:
> Hi all,
>
> I've not done much with MySQL subqueries, and I'm trying right now with what 
> I find to be surprising results. I wonder if someone can help me understand.
>
> I have a pile of data that with columns for "institution" and "date". 
> Institution gets repeated a lot, with many different dates. I want to select 
> all the institutions that *only* have dates after July 1 and don't appear in 
> the table before that. My solution was to do a first query for all the 
> institutions that DO have dates before July 1
> SELECT distinct institution FROM `renewals` WHERE snap_date < '2011-07-01'
>
> And then to do a SELECT query on all the institutions:
> SELECT distinct institution from renewals
>
> And then try to do a NOT IN subquery subtracting the smaller query from the 
> larger one:
>
> SELECT distinct institution from renewals
> WHERE institution not in
> (SELECT distinct institution FROM `renewals` WHERE snap_date < '2011-07-01')
>
> ...only it doesn't seem to work. Or rather, the query has been running for 
> several minutes and never comes back with an answer. Each of these two 
> queries takes just a few milliseconds to run on its own.
>
> Can someone tell me (a) am I just formatting the query wrong, (b) do 
> subqueries like this just take forever, and/or (c) is there a better way to 
> do this? (I don't really understand about JOIN queries, but from what I can 
> tell they are only for mixing the results of two different tables so I think 
> they might not apply here.)
>
> Any advice would be most welcome.
>
> Thanks
> Ken
>



-- 
Cary Gordon
The Cherry Hill Company
http://chillco.com

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