Using table aliases prevents such problems by disambiguating the column
names. For example, if you had table aliases in just one part of this
query as in the below, you would have gotten an error instead of
deleting all those rows:
select respondent_id from respondent where respondent_id in (select
cs.respondent_id from chat_session cs where cs.project_id in (select project_id
from
project where company_id = 4));
Cheers,
Eric
On 2/22/2011 1:07 PM, Scott Dunbar wrote:
Yes, you're correct. I guess this makes sense but it does seem
strange that I can enter garbage in a query but it still runs. And in
my case the output from this (the entire table) was then used in a
delete statement that toasted the entire table. Allowing bogus SQL
just seems "wrong" but I do understand what's going on.
Thanks for your help.
On 02/22/2011 10:45 AM, Tom Lane wrote:
"Scott Dunbar"<sc...@xigole.com> writes:
I have a nested in clause like:
select respondent_id from respondent where respondent_id in (select
respondent_id from chat_session where project_id in (select project_id from
project where company_id = 4));
However, in this example, there is no column named respondent_id in the
chat_session table.
Probably there is one in respondent, though? This behavior is not a bug
--- what you have there is an outer reference, and it is working exactly
as specified by the SQL standard. Sub-selects would be a whole lot less
useful if they couldn't refer to variables of the outer query.
regards, tom lane
--
Scott Dunbar
Xigole Systems, Inc.
Enterprise software consulting, development, and hosting
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