Up to version 4.0, only nested queries of the form
INSERT ... SELECT ...
and REPLACE
... SELECT ...
are supported. The
IN()
construct can be used in other
contexts.
It is often possible to rewrite a query without a subquery:
SELECT * FROM t1 WHERE id IN (SELECT id FROM t2);
This can be rewritten as:
SELECT t1.* FROM t1,t2 WHERE t1.id=t2.id;
The queries:
SELECT * FROM t1 WHERE id NOT IN (SELECT id FROM t2); SELECT * FROM t1 WHERE NOT EXISTS (SELECT id FROM t2 WHERE t1.id=t2.id);
Can be rewritten as:
SELECT table1.* FROM table1 LEFT JOIN table2 ON table1.id=table2.id WHERE table2.id IS NULL;
A LEFT [OUTER] JOIN
can be faster than an
equivalent subquery because the server might be able to
optimise it better -- a fact that is not specific to MySQL
Server alone. Prior to SQL-92, outer joins did not exist, so
subqueries were the only way to do certain things in those
bygone days. Today, MySQL Server and many other modern
database systems offer a whole range of outer joins types.
For more complicated subqueries you can often create temporary
tables to hold the subquery. In some cases, however, this
option will not work. The most frequently encountered of these
cases arises with DELETE
statements, for
which standard SQL does not support joins (except in
subqueries). For this situation there are three options
available:
The first option is to upgrade to MySQL version 4.1.
The second option is to use a procedural programming
language (such as Perl or PHP) to submit a
SELECT
query to obtain the primary keys
for the records to be deleted, and then use these values
to construct the DELETE
statement
(DELETE FROM ... WHERE ... IN (key1, key2,
...)
).
The third option is to use interactive SQL to construct a
set of DELETE
statements automatically,
using the MySQL extension CONCAT()
(in
lieu of the standard ||
operator). For
example:
SELECT CONCAT('DELETE FROM tab1 WHERE pkid = ', "'", tab1.pkid, "'", ';') FROM tab1, tab2 WHERE tab1.col1 = tab2.col2;
You can place this query in a script file and redirect
input from it to the mysql
command-line
interpreter, piping its output back to a second instance
of the interpreter:
shell> mysql --skip-column-names mydb < myscript.sql | mysql mydb
MySQL Server 4.0 supports multiple-table
DELETE
s that can be used to efficiently
delete rows based on information from one table or even from
many tables at the same time. Multiple-table
UPDATE
s are also supported from version
4.0.
This is a translation of the MySQL Reference Manual that can be found at dev.mysql.com. The original Reference Manual is in English, and this translation is not necessarily as up to date as the English version.