From: | Alban Hertroys <dalroi(at)solfertje(dot)student(dot)utwente(dot)nl> |
---|---|
To: | Christoph Zwerschke <cito(at)online(dot)de> |
Cc: | pgsql-general(at)postgresql(dot)org |
Subject: | Re: Finding rows with text columns beginning with other text columns |
Date: | 2010-05-10 09:50:25 |
Message-ID: | F90AE329-82B8-42C6-931A-47A0337B7808@solfertje.student.utwente.nl |
Views: | Raw Message | Whole Thread | Download mbox | Resend email |
Thread: | |
Lists: | pgsql-general |
On 10 May 2010, at 24:01, Christoph Zwerschke wrote:
> We want to find all entries in b where txt begins with an
> existing txt entry in a:
>
> select * from b join a on b.txt like a.txt||'%'
>
> On the first glance you would expect that this is performant
> since it can use the index, but sadly it doesn't work.
> The problem seems to be that Postgres can not guarantee that
> column a.txt does not contain a '%', so it cannot optimize.
>
> I feel there should be a performat way to query these entries,
> but I can't come up with anything. Can anybody help me?
Have you tried using substring instead of like?
Alban Hertroys
--
If you can't see the forest for the trees,
cut the trees and you'll see there is no forest.
!DSPAM:737,4be7d6ec10411051620847!
From | Date | Subject | |
---|---|---|---|
Next Message | Alban Hertroys | 2010-05-10 10:04:46 | Re: Query that produces index information for a Table |
Previous Message | OisinJK | 2010-05-10 09:43:44 | Create View from command line |