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Re: Finally figuring out some ob-sqlite stuff -- for worg?


From: Eric Abrahamsen
Subject: Re: Finally figuring out some ob-sqlite stuff -- for worg?
Date: Sun, 10 Nov 2019 11:48:50 -0800
User-agent: Gnus/5.13 (Gnus v5.13) Emacs/27.0.50 (gnu/linux)

Stefan Nobis <address@hidden> writes:

> Eric Abrahamsen <address@hidden> writes:
>
>> I was confused in part because the "where exists (select *..." looks
>> like its main purpose is to return rows.
>
> Indeed that's the purpose: Restrict the set of rows upon which update
> acts on. Here I tried to reformat the statement a bit in order to
> emphasize its structure:

Right -- I should have phrased that as "looks like its main purpose is
to return data from rows", which as you clarify below, isn't its main
purpose.

> #+begin_src sql
>   UPDATE bookreview
>   SET rating = (select rating from updates
>                 where bookreview.id = updates.id)
>   WHERE EXISTS (select * from updates
>                 where updates.id = bookreview.id);
> #+end_src
>
> The subselect of the "SET rating" part is a correlated subquery. So if
> you imagine UPDATE as a kind of loop over the table, the subquery of
> the SET part is executed once for every row UPDATE acts on (maybe the
> SQL execution engine optimizes this in some kind, but the mental model
> here is: run the subquery for every row we visit on our journey
> throught the table).
>
> Only the WHERE EXISTS clause belonging directly to the UPDATE
> statement will reduce the set of rows to act on.
>
>> Will the select subquery actually restrict the values that are
>> available for updating/comparison in the update statement?
>
> No.
>
>> Or does the "exists" mean the subquery is treated as a plain yes/no
>> boolean, and the update still has access to anything it likes? We
>> could write "where exists (select <foo>" to the same effect?
>
> Yes. The SELECT clause of an EXISTS subquery (as in the above example)
> is rather meaningless. So somethimes you see constructs like "where
> exists (select 1 from ...)". Some SQL engines are not very clever and
> execute the subquery of such an EXISTS clause unchanged - meaning that
> way too much data is fetched for the intermediate result (unnecessary
> IO and maybe polluting caches). Thus the "select 1" as a workaround
> for those unclever engines. But current engines should have no
> problems with optimizing these EXISTS subqueries and in that case it
> does not matter how the select clause looks like - it will be ignored.
>
>> In essence, the "where exists" is acting as an "inner join"...
>
> Yes, effectively we are simulating an inner join at this point. Sadly,
> many SQL engines are not able to update rows of join constructs (or at
> least have quite severe constraints in these cases). Thus we need to
> build these kinds of workarounds to change data in more complex cases.
>
> SQL is quite a capable language, but it has also has some rough edges.
> :)

Really interesting! Thanks again for the in-depth explanation.




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