Subquery Expressions
EXISTS
IN
NOT IN
ANY
ALL
SOME
subquery
This section describes the SQL-compliant subquery
expressions available in PostgreSQL.
All of the expression forms documented in this section return
Boolean (true/false) results.
EXISTS
EXISTS (subquery)
The argument of EXISTS is an arbitrary SELECT statement,
or subquery. The
subquery is evaluated to determine whether it returns any rows.
If it returns at least one row, the result of EXISTS is
true
; if the subquery returns no rows, the result of EXISTS
is false
.
The subquery can refer to variables from the surrounding query,
which will act as constants during any one evaluation of the subquery.
The subquery will generally only be executed long enough to determine
whether at least one row is returned, not all the way to completion.
It is unwise to write a subquery that has side effects (such as
calling sequence functions); whether the side effects occur
might be unpredictable.
Since the result depends only on whether any rows are returned,
and not on the contents of those rows, the output list of the
subquery is normally unimportant. A common coding convention is
to write all EXISTS tests in the form
EXISTS(SELECT 1 WHERE ...). There are exceptions to
this rule however, such as subqueries that use INTERSECT.
This simple example is like an inner join on col2, but
it produces at most one output row for each tab1 row,
even if there are several matching tab2 rows:
SELECT col1
FROM tab1
WHERE EXISTS (SELECT 1 FROM tab2 WHERE col2 = tab1.col2);
IN
expression IN (subquery)
The right-hand side is a parenthesized
subquery, which must return exactly one column. The left-hand expression
is evaluated and compared to each row of the subquery result.
The result of IN is true
if any equal subquery row is found.
The result is false
if no equal row is found (including the
case where the subquery returns no rows).
Note that if the left-hand expression yields null, or if there are
no equal right-hand values and at least one right-hand row yields
null, the result of the IN construct will be null, not false.
This is in accordance with SQL's normal rules for Boolean combinations
of null values.
As with EXISTS, it's unwise to assume that the subquery will
be evaluated completely.
row_constructor IN (subquery)
The left-hand side of this form of IN is a row constructor,
as described in .
The right-hand side is a parenthesized
subquery, which must return exactly as many columns as there are
expressions in the left-hand row. The left-hand expressions are
evaluated and compared row-wise to each row of the subquery result.
The result of IN is true
if any equal subquery row is found.
The result is false
if no equal row is found (including the
case where the subquery returns no rows).
As usual, null values in the rows are combined per
the normal rules of SQL Boolean expressions. Two rows are considered
equal if all their corresponding members are non-null and equal; the rows
are unequal if any corresponding members are non-null and unequal;
otherwise the result of that row comparison is unknown (null).
If all the per-row results are either unequal or null, with at least one
null, then the result of IN is null.
NOT IN
expression NOT IN (subquery)
The right-hand side is a parenthesized
subquery, which must return exactly one column. The left-hand expression
is evaluated and compared to each row of the subquery result.
The result of NOT IN is true
if only unequal subquery rows
are found (including the case where the subquery returns no rows).
The result is false
if any equal row is found.
Note that if the left-hand expression yields null, or if there are
no equal right-hand values and at least one right-hand row yields
null, the result of the NOT IN construct will be null, not true.
This is in accordance with SQL's normal rules for Boolean combinations
of null values.
As with EXISTS, it's unwise to assume that the subquery will
be evaluated completely.
row_constructor NOT IN (subquery)
The left-hand side of this form of NOT IN is a row constructor,
as described in .
The right-hand side is a parenthesized
subquery, which must return exactly as many columns as there are
expressions in the left-hand row. The left-hand expressions are
evaluated and compared row-wise to each row of the subquery result.
The result of NOT IN is true
if only unequal subquery rows
are found (including the case where the subquery returns no rows).
The result is false
if any equal row is found.
As usual, null values in the rows are combined per
the normal rules of SQL Boolean expressions. Two rows are considered
equal if all their corresponding members are non-null and equal; the rows
are unequal if any corresponding members are non-null and unequal;
otherwise the result of that row comparison is unknown (null).
If all the per-row results are either unequal or null, with at least one
null, then the result of NOT IN is null.
ANY/SOME
expression operator ANY (subquery)
expression operator SOME (subquery)
The right-hand side is a parenthesized
subquery, which must return exactly one column. The left-hand expression
is evaluated and compared to each row of the subquery result using the
given operator, which must yield a Boolean
result.
The result of ANY is true
if any true result is obtained.
The result is false
if no true result is found (including the
case where the subquery returns no rows).
SOME is a synonym for ANY.
IN is equivalent to = ANY.
Note that if there are no successes and at least one right-hand row yields
null for the operator's result, the result of the ANY construct
will be null, not false.
This is in accordance with SQL's normal rules for Boolean combinations
of null values.
As with EXISTS, it's unwise to assume that the subquery will
be evaluated completely.
row_constructor operator ANY (subquery)
row_constructor operator SOME (subquery)
The left-hand side of this form of ANY is a row constructor,
as described in .
The right-hand side is a parenthesized
subquery, which must return exactly as many columns as there are
expressions in the left-hand row. The left-hand expressions are
evaluated and compared row-wise to each row of the subquery result,
using the given operator.
The result of ANY is true
if the comparison
returns true for any subquery row.
The result is false
if the comparison returns false for every
subquery row (including the case where the subquery returns no
rows).
The result is NULL if no comparison with a subquery row returns true,
and at least one comparison returns NULL.
See for details about the meaning
of a row constructor comparison.
ALL
expression operator ALL (subquery)
The right-hand side is a parenthesized
subquery, which must return exactly one column. The left-hand expression
is evaluated and compared to each row of the subquery result using the
given operator, which must yield a Boolean
result.
The result of ALL is true
if all rows yield true
(including the case where the subquery returns no rows).
The result is false
if any false result is found.
The result is NULL if no comparison with a subquery row returns false,
and at least one comparison returns NULL.
NOT IN is equivalent to <> ALL.
As with EXISTS, it's unwise to assume that the subquery will
be evaluated completely.
row_constructor operator ALL (subquery)
The left-hand side of this form of ALL is a row constructor,
as described in .
The right-hand side is a parenthesized
subquery, which must return exactly as many columns as there are
expressions in the left-hand row. The left-hand expressions are
evaluated and compared row-wise to each row of the subquery result,
using the given operator.
The result of ALL is true
if the comparison
returns true for all subquery rows (including the
case where the subquery returns no rows).
The result is false
if the comparison returns false for any
subquery row.
The result is NULL if no comparison with a subquery row returns false,
and at least one comparison returns NULL.
See for details about the meaning
of a row constructor comparison.
Single-Row Comparison
comparison
subquery result row
row_constructor operator (subquery)
The left-hand side is a row constructor,
as described in .
The right-hand side is a parenthesized subquery, which must return exactly
as many columns as there are expressions in the left-hand row. Furthermore,
the subquery cannot return more than one row. (If it returns zero rows,
the result is taken to be null.) The left-hand side is evaluated and
compared row-wise to the single subquery result row.
See for details about the meaning
of a row constructor comparison.