Arjen van der Meijden <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> ... Rewriting it to something like this made the last iteration about as 
> fast as the first:

> SELECT docid, (SELECT work to be done for each document)
> FROM documents
> WHERE docid IN (SELECT docid FROM documents
>       ORDER BY docid
>       LIMIT 1000
>       OFFSET ?
> )

The reason for this, of course, is that the LIMIT/OFFSET filter is the
last step in a query plan --- it comes *after* computation of the SELECT
output list.  (So does ORDER BY, if an explicit sort step is needed.)
So if you have an expensive-to-compute output list, a trick like Arjen's
will help.  I don't think you can use an "IN" though, at least not if
you want to preserve the sort ordering in the final result.

                        regards, tom lane

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