Re: query slowness caused by table alias
Tom Lane <tgl@sss.pgh.pa.us>
From: Tom Lane <tgl@sss.pgh.pa.us>
To: Chi Fan <chifungfan@yahoo.com>
Cc: bugs@postgresql.org
Date: 2000-05-05T03:25:11Z
Lists: pgsql-bugs
Chi Fan <chifungfan@yahoo.com> writes: > I don't know if this's really a bug in 7.0, but I > don't see this > problem/feature in 6.5.3. > EXPLAIN > SELECT * > FROM part p -- let p alias to part > WHERE part.part_id = 42; -- but don't use p > Nested Loop (cost=0.00..2429.30 rows=50735 width=219) > -> Index Scan using part_pkey on part (cost=0.00..3.60 rows=1 width=4) > -> Seq Scan on part p (cost=0.00..1918.35 rows=50735 width=215) This is correct behavior. Since you aliased part as p, the *only* way to refer to that FROM entry elsewhere in the query is 'p'. 'part' is a second reference to the table, resulting in a self-join, just as if you had written "FROM part p, part part WHERE ...". The only difference is that '*' expands to just the fields of tables directly referenced in FROM, so you don't see two copies of the fields. (Maybe if you did, the mistake would be more obvious...) AFAIK, 6.5 and earlier versions behave the same way as 7.0 on this point. regards, tom lane