My mistake then. Better to check than let a logical hole in… Thanks for letting me know, Simon

 

-----Original Message-----
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Dennis Haney
Sent: Tuesday, January 27, 2004 14:33
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Cc: 'Tom Lane'; [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: [HACKERS] Recursive optimization of IN subqueries

 

Simon Riggs wrote:

Tom Lane writes
 
In the second place, what the code is doing is dependent on an
understanding
of the semantics of IN; I'm not sure it's applicable to, say,
 WHERE outervar > ANY (SELECT innervar FROM ...)
and it's definitely not applicable to
 WHERE outervar > ALL (SELECT innervar FROM ...)
In particular, the optimization paths that involve unique-ifying the
subselect output and then using it as the outer side of a join would
definitely not work for these sorts of things.
    

 
I'm not sure if I've understood you correctly in the section above. Are
you saying that these types of queries don't have a meaningful or
defined response? Or just that they wouldn't be very well optimized as a
result of the unique-ifying code changes? Or have I just mis-read the
thread...
  

I think Tom is refering to the context of the specific optimization.
The optimization we are discussing does nothing to correlated subqueries, and a uncorrolated subquery with > ALL/ANY is actually a computed constant and not a join.


-- 
Dennis

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