On May 18, 2012, at 13:46, Jon Smark <jon.sm...@yahoo.com> wrote:

> Dear postgresql-general,
> 
> What would be the best way to fetch in a single round trip a set of table 
> rows?
> To clarify, suppose I have a 'widgets' table with columns 'wid' and 'data', 
> and I wish to retrieve all rows that belong to the client side array 
> $targets. 
> Obviously one solution would be to loop on the client-side, with each 
> iteration
> fetching one row.  This however entails many round trips in the client <->
> postmaster communication, which is undesirable for performance reasons.
> Therefore, I would rather tell the PostgreSQL server to give me all rows
> whose wid belongs in a given set.
> 
> I can think of two solutions:
> 
> 1) "SELECT wid, data FROM widgets WHERE wid IN $targets"
> 2) "SELECT wid, data FROM widgets WHERE ARRAY [wid] <@ $targets"
> 
> Is there another (better) approach I'm missing?  Also, is there any 
> significant
> performance difference for PostgreSQL between solutions 1 and 2? (Solution 
> 1 seems more efficient, though solution 2 is actually a better fit for the
> client-side bindings I'm using).
> 
> Thanks in advance!
> Jon
> 
> 

...WHERE wid = ANY(string_to_array(?,';'))

where the ? is a parameter that you replace with a semi-colon delimited listing 
of widget IDs

Performance depends on specifics you have not provided, especially the expected 
number of widgets you are going to be filtering one.

David J.




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