Re: [BUGS] We are not following the spec for HAVING without GROUP BY - Mailing list pgsql-hackers

From Gill, Jerry T.
Subject Re: [BUGS] We are not following the spec for HAVING without GROUP BY
Date
Msg-id 9D87A98A6510F24C817257895EF4282A05460F90@omacex08.corp.westworlds.com
Whole thread Raw
List pgsql-hackers
Here is your Sql run in a DB2 database.
connect to phoenix
  Database Connection Information
Database server        = DB2/LINUX 8.1.5SQL authorization ID   = GILLLocal database alias   = PHOENIX


create table tab (col integer)
DB20000I  The SQL command completed successfully.

select 1 from tab having 1=0

1
-----------
 0 record(s) selected.


select 1 from tab having 1=1

1
-----------         1
 1 record(s) selected.


insert into tab values(1)
DB20000I  The SQL command completed successfully.

insert into tab values(2)
DB20000I  The SQL command completed successfully.

select 1 from tab having 1=0

1
-----------
 0 record(s) selected.


select 1 from tab having 1=1

1
-----------         1
 1 record(s) selected.

Hope that helps.
-Jgill

-----Original Message-----
From: pgsql-bugs-owner@postgresql.org
[mailto:pgsql-bugs-owner@postgresql.org]On Behalf Of Tom Lane
Sent: Thursday, March 10, 2005 11:45 AM
To: pgsql-hackers@postgresql.org; pgsql-bugs@postgresql.org
Subject: Re: [BUGS] [HACKERS] We are not following the spec for HAVING
without GROUP BY


I wrote:
> This is quite clear that the output of a HAVING clause is a "grouped
> table" no matter whether the query uses GROUP BY or aggregates or not.

> What that means is that neither the HAVING clause nor the targetlist
> can use any ungrouped columns except within aggregate calls; that is,
>     select col from tab having 2>1
> is in fact illegal per SQL spec, because col isn't a grouping column
> (there are no grouping columns in this query).

Actually, it's even more than that: a query with HAVING and no GROUP BY
should always return 1 row (if the HAVING succeeds) or 0 rows (if not).
If there are no aggregates, the entire from/where clause can be thrown
away, because it can have no impact on the result!

Would those of you with access to other DBMSes try this:

create table tab (col integer);
select 1 from tab having 1=0;
select 1 from tab having 1=1;
insert into tab values(1);
insert into tab values(2);
select 1 from tab having 1=0;
select 1 from tab having 1=1;

I claim that a SQL-conformant database will return 0, 1, 0, and 1 rows
from the 4 selects --- that is, the contents of tab make no difference
at all.  (MySQL returns 0, 0, 0, and 2 rows, so they are definitely
copying our mistake...)
        regards, tom lane

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