Re: Query - student, skill
От | Kevin Grittner |
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Тема | Re: Query - student, skill |
Дата | |
Msg-id | 1381329765.1064.YahooMailNeo@web162902.mail.bf1.yahoo.com обсуждение исходный текст |
Ответ на | Query - student, skill (Jayadevan M <maymala.jayadevan@gmail.com>) |
Ответы |
Re: Query - student, skill
|
Список | pgsql-novice |
Jayadevan M <maymala.jayadevan@gmail.com> wrote: > To fetch records of students who know , say, 'Java' and 'Oracle', > is this the best way? > > select s.id, s.name > from stud s > join stud_skill s_k on s.id = s_k.stud_id > join skill sk on sk.id = s_k.skill_id > where sk_name = 'Java' > intersect > select s.id, s.name > from stud s > join stud_skill s_k on s.id = s_k.stud_id > join skill sk on sk.id = s_k.skill_id > where sk_name = 'Oracle' > ; I think that in most (maybe all?) cases the set operations like INTERSECT cause the queries on both sides to be executed and the set operation performed on the results. It should be faster just to use two joins to the skill table: select s.id, s.name from stud s join stud_skill s_k on s.id = s_k.stud_id join skill sk1 on sk1.id = s_k.skill_id and sk1.sk_name = 'Java' join skill sk2 on sk2.id = s_k.skill_id and sk2.sk_name = 'Oracle' ; If the skill names are not unique, you might want to throw a DISTINCT in there, too. -- Kevin Grittner EDB: http://www.enterprisedb.com The Enterprise PostgreSQL Company
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