On Wed, 2023-11-08 at 16:36 -0500, Tom Lane wrote:
> Laurenz Albe <laurenz.a...@cybertec.at> writes:
> > I found this in a blog 
> > (https://buttondown.email/jaffray/archive/sql-scoping-is-surprisingly-subtle-and-semantic/):
> >   CREATE TABLE aa (a INT);
> >   INSERT INTO aa VALUES (1), (2), (3);
> >   CREATE TABLE xx (x INT);
> >   INSERT INTO xx VALUES (10), (20), (30);
> 
> >   SELECT (SELECT sum(a) FROM xx LIMIT 1) FROM aa;
> 
> >    sum 
> >   ═════
> >      6
> >   (1 row)
> 
> > Huh?  Shouldn't that return three rows, just like
> 
> No.  The aggregate function is semantically of the closest query level
> that contributes a Var to its argument, so it's evaluated at the "FROM
> aa" level, causing that level to become an aggregated query that
> returns just one row.  Then it acts like an outer reference as far
> as the sub-select is concerned.  This is documented at the end of
> Section 4.2.7 in our manual,
> 
> https://www.postgresql.org/docs/current/sql-expressions.html#SYNTAX-AGGREGATES
> 
> Thank the SQL spec for that weirdness.

Thanks for the explanation.  Seems like another instance of the standard
committee smoking the wrong stuff.

Yours,
Laurenz Albe


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