On Tuesday 31 July 2007 18:52:22 Josh Trutwin wrote: > On Tue, 31 Jul 2007 17:30:51 +0000 > > Andreas Joseph Krogh <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > > Hi all. I have the following schema: > > > > CREATE TABLE test ( > > id integer NOT NULL, > > field character varying NOT NULL, > > value character varying NOT NULL > > ); > > > > ALTER TABLE ONLY test > > ADD CONSTRAINT test_id_key UNIQUE (id, field, value); > > > > CREATE INDEX test_like_idx ON test USING btree (id, field, value > > varchar_pattern_ops); > > > > Using INTERSECT I want to retrieve the rows matching (pseudo-code) > > "firstname LIKE ('andrea%' OR 'jose%') AND lastname LIKE 'kro%'" > > Why not: > > WHERE (t.field = lastname AND t.value LIKE 'kro%') > OR (t.field = firsname AND ( > t.value LIKE 'jose%' OR t.value LIKE 'andrea%') > ) > > Not tested. If you're having performance problems is probably less > like that the INTERSECT is the problem with all those LIKE's in > there? Is t.value indexed?
Yes, as I wrote: CREATE INDEX test_like_idx ON test USING btree (id, field, value varchar_pattern_ops); And I'm observing that it uses that index. Your query doesn't cut it, let me try to explain what I'm trying to achieve: Suppose I have the following data: INSERT INTO test VALUES (1, 'firstname', 'andreas'); INSERT INTO test VALUES (1, 'firstname', 'joseph'); INSERT INTO test VALUES (1, 'lastname', 'krogh'); INSERT INTO test VALUES (2, 'firstname', 'andreas'); INSERT INTO test VALUES (2, 'lastname', 'noname'); The reason for why I use INTERSECT is that I want: SELECT t.id from test t WHERE t.field = 'firstname' AND t.value LIKE 'andrea%' INTERSECT SELECT t.id FROM test t WHERE t.field = 'firstname' AND t.value LIKE 'jose%' INTERSECT SELECT t.id FROM test t WHERE t.field = 'lastname' AND t.value LIKE 'kro%'; To return only id 1, and the query: SELECT t.id from test t WHERE t.field = 'firstname' AND t.value LIKE 'andrea%' INTERSECT SELECT t.id FROM test t WHERE t.field = 'firstname' AND t.value LIKE 'jose%' INTERSECT SELECT t.id FROM test t WHERE t.field = 'lastname' AND t.value LIKE 'non%'; To return no rows at all (cause nobydy's name is "andreas joseph noname"). Your suggestion doesn't cover this case. -- AJK ---------------------------(end of broadcast)--------------------------- TIP 2: Don't 'kill -9' the postmaster