IN
<value> [NOT] IN (<select_stmt> | <value_list>) <value_list> ::= <value_1> [, <value_2> ...]
The IN
predicate tests whether the value of the expression on the left side is present in the set of values specified on the right side.The set of values cannot have more than 65535 items.The IN
predicate can be replaced with the following equivalent forms:
(<value> = <value_1> [OR <value> = <value_2> ...]) <value> = { ANY | SOME } (<select_stmt>)
When the IN
predicate is used in the search conditions of DML queries, the Firebird optimizer can use an index on the searched column, if a suitable one exists.Lists that are known to be constant are pre-evaluated as invariants and cached as a binary search tree, making comparisons faster if the condition needs to be tested for many rows or if the value list is long.
In its second form, the IN
predicate tests whether the value of the expression on the left side is present — or not present, if NOT IN
is used — in the result of the subquery on the right side.
The subquery must specify only one column, otherwise the error “count of column list and variable list do not match” will occur.
Queries using an IN
predicate with a subquery can be replaced with a similar query using the EXISTS
predicate.For example, the following query:
SELECT
model, speed, hd
FROM PC
WHERE
model IN (SELECT model
FROM product
WHERE maker = 'A');
can be replaced with a similar one using the EXISTS
predicate:
SELECT
model, speed, hd
FROM PC
WHERE
EXISTS (SELECT *
FROM product
WHERE maker = 'A'
AND product.model = PC.model);
However, a query using NOT IN
with a subquery does not always give the same result as its NOT EXISTS
counterpart.The reason is that EXISTS
always returns TRUE or FALSE, whereas IN
returns NULL
in one of these two cases:
-
when the test value is
NULL
and theIN ()
list is not empty -
when the test value has no match in the
IN ()
list and at least one list element isNULL
It is in only these two cases that IN ()
will return NULL
while the EXISTS
predicate will return FALSE
(“no matching row found”).In a search or, for example, an IF (…)
statement, both results mean “failure”, and it makes no difference to the outcome.
For the same data, NOT IN ()
will return NULL
, while NOT EXISTS
will return TRUE
, leading to opposite results.
As an example, suppose you have the following query:
-- Looking for people who were not born
-- on the same day as any famous New York citizen
SELECT P1.name AS NAME
FROM Personnel P1
WHERE P1.birthday NOT IN (SELECT C1.birthday
FROM Celebrities C1
WHERE C1.birthcity = 'New York');
Now, assume that the NY celebrities list is not empty and contains at least one NULL birthday.Then for every citizen who does not share his birthday with a NY celebrity, NOT IN
will return NULL
, because that is what IN
does.The search condition is thereby not satisfied and the citizen will be left out of the SELECT
result, which is wrong.
For citizens whose birthday does match with a celebrity’s birthday, NOT IN
will correctly return FALSE
, so they will be left out too, and no rows will be returned.
If the NOT EXISTS
form is used:
-- Looking for people who were not born
-- on the same day as any famous New York citizen
SELECT P1.name AS NAME
FROM Personnel P1
WHERE NOT EXISTS (SELECT *
FROM Celebrities C1
WHERE C1.birthcity = 'New York'
AND C1.birthday = P1.birthday);
non-matches will have a NOT EXISTS
result of TRUE
and their records will be in the result set.
Tip
|
If there is any chance of |
-
Find employees with the names “Pete”, “Ann” and “Roger”:
SELECT * FROM EMPLOYEE WHERE FIRST_NAME IN ('Pete', 'Ann', 'Roger');
-
Find all computers that have models whose manufacturer starts with the letter “A”:
SELECT model, speed, hd FROM PC WHERE model IN (SELECT model FROM product WHERE maker STARTING WITH 'A');