From: | dg(at)illustra(dot)com (David Gould) |
---|---|
To: | tgl(at)sss(dot)pgh(dot)pa(dot)us (Tom Lane) |
Cc: | pgsql-hackers(at)hub(dot)org |
Subject: | Re: [HACKERS] "internal error" triggered by EXISTS() |
Date: | 1998-07-14 22:50:19 |
Message-ID: | 9807142250.AA14382@hawk.illustra.com |
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Lists: | pgsql-hackers |
>
> I tried the following to find out whether a table has any records
> with field1 < X (for a constant X):
>
> tgl=> SELECT EXISTS(SELECT * FROM table WHERE field1 < X);
> ERROR: internal error: do not know how to transform targetlist
>
> Is this a bug? (I'm using development sources from yesterday.)
>
> Am I using EXISTS() incorrectly? The examples I've been able to find
> only show it as a part of a WHERE clause.
>
> If it did work, would it be any faster than a table scan? The code
> I was hoping to replace is like this:
> SELECT COUNT(field1) WHERE field1 < X;
> // test whether result > 0
> Since aggregates aren't optimized very well, this ends up reading
> much or all of the table, even if there is an index for field1.
> I was hoping EXISTS() might be smarter...
>
> regards, tom lane
>
Should have given a syntax error probably. But you might try:
select 1 where exists (select...);
Should be faster if and only if we are doing the existential query
optimization trick (stop on the first qualifying row).
-dg
David Gould dg(at)illustra(dot)com 510.628.3783 or 510.305.9468
Informix Software (No, really) 300 Lakeside Drive Oakland, CA 94612
- If simplicity worked, the world would be overrun with insects. -
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