On Monday 21 Jun 2004 3:19 pm, Tom Lane wrote: > Gary Stainburn <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes: > > from requests r, users u, request_types t, > > request_states s, dealerships d, departments de, customers c > > left outer join (select co_r_id, count(co_r_id) from comments > > group by co_r_id) co on > > co.co_r_id = r.r_id > > psql:goole1.sql:45: ERROR: Relation "r" does not exist > > I think you have learned some bad habits from MySQL :-( > > PostgreSQL follows the SQL spec and makes JOIN bind more tightly than > comma. Therefore, in the above the LEFT JOIN is only joining "c" to > "co" and its JOIN ON clause can only reference those two relations. > > You could get the behavior you seem to expect by changing each comma > in the from-list to CROSS JOIN. Then the JOINs all bind left-to-right > and so "r" will be part of the left argument of the LEFT JOIN. > > Note that if you are using a pre-7.4 release this could have negative > effects on performance --- see the user's guide concerning how explicit > JOIN syntax constrains the planner. > > regards, tom lane
Thanks for this Tom, but I've never used MySQL. I'll look at the docs and have another go. Gary -- Gary Stainburn This email does not contain private or confidential material as it may be snooped on by interested government parties for unknown and undisclosed purposes - Regulation of Investigatory Powers Act, 2000 ---------------------------(end of broadcast)--------------------------- TIP 5: Have you checked our extensive FAQ? http://www.postgresql.org/docs/faqs/FAQ.html