Re: Alternative to INTERSECT - Mailing list pgsql-sql

From Andreas Joseph Krogh
Subject Re: Alternative to INTERSECT
Date
Msg-id 200707311945.16573.andreak@officenet.no
Whole thread Raw
In response to Re: Alternative to INTERSECT  (Josh Trutwin <josh@trutwins.homeip.net>)
Responses Re: Alternative to INTERSECT  ("Luiz K. Matsumura" <luiz@planit.com.br>)
List pgsql-sql
On Tuesday 31 July 2007 18:52:22 Josh Trutwin wrote:
> On Tue, 31 Jul 2007 17:30:51 +0000
>
> Andreas Joseph Krogh <andreak@officenet.no> wrote:
> > Hi all. I have the following schema:
> >
> > CREATE TABLE test (
> >     id integer NOT NULL,
> >     field character varying NOT NULL,
> >     value character varying NOT NULL
> > );
> >
> > ALTER TABLE ONLY test
> >     ADD CONSTRAINT test_id_key UNIQUE (id, field, value);
> >
> > CREATE INDEX test_like_idx ON test USING btree (id, field, value
> > varchar_pattern_ops);
> >
> > Using INTERSECT I want to retrieve the rows matching (pseudo-code)
> > "firstname LIKE ('andrea%' OR 'jose%') AND lastname LIKE 'kro%'"
>
> Why not:
>
> WHERE (t.field = lastname AND t.value LIKE 'kro%')
>    OR (t.field = firsname AND (
>        t.value LIKE 'jose%' OR t.value LIKE 'andrea%')
>        )
>
> Not tested.  If you're having performance problems is probably less
> like that the INTERSECT is the problem with all those LIKE's in
> there?  Is t.value indexed?

Yes, as I wrote:

CREATE INDEX test_like_idx ON test USING btree  (id, field, value varchar_pattern_ops);

And I'm observing that it uses that index.

Your query doesn't cut it, let me try to explain what I'm trying to achieve:

Suppose I have the following data:
INSERT INTO test VALUES (1, 'firstname', 'andreas');
INSERT INTO test VALUES (1, 'firstname', 'joseph');
INSERT INTO test VALUES (1, 'lastname', 'krogh');
INSERT INTO test VALUES (2, 'firstname', 'andreas');
INSERT INTO test VALUES (2, 'lastname', 'noname');

The reason for why I use INTERSECT is that I want:

SELECT t.id from test t WHERE t.field = 'firstname' AND t.value
LIKE 'andrea%'
INTERSECT SELECT t.id FROM test t WHERE t.field = 'firstname' AND t.value
LIKE 'jose%'
INTERSECT SELECT t.id FROM test t WHERE t.field = 'lastname'  AND t.value
LIKE 'kro%';

To return only id 1, and the query:

SELECT t.id from test t WHERE t.field = 'firstname' AND t.value
LIKE 'andrea%'
INTERSECT SELECT t.id FROM test t WHERE t.field = 'firstname' AND t.value
LIKE 'jose%'
INTERSECT SELECT t.id FROM test t WHERE t.field = 'lastname'  AND t.value
LIKE 'non%';

To return no rows at all (cause nobydy's name is "andreas joseph noname").

Your suggestion doesn't cover this case.

--
AJK


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