"Simon Riggs" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes: > I've just read a paper that says PostgreSQL doesn't do this.
What does he mean by that exactly, and which PG version is he looking at? As Greg notes, we do know how to push down non-aggregated conditions, but I'm not sure that's what he's thinking of. There have been some relevant bug fixes, eg 2004-07-10 14:39 tgl * src/backend/executor/: nodeAgg.c (REL7_4_STABLE), nodeAgg.c: Test HAVING condition before computing targetlist of an Aggregate node. This is required by SQL spec to avoid failures in cases like SELECT sum(win)/sum(lose) FROM ... GROUP BY ... HAVING sum(lose) > 0; AFAICT we have gotten this wrong since day one. Kudos to Holger Jakobs for being the first to notice. Also, it's still true that we run all the aggregate transition functions in parallel, so if you were hoping to use HAVING on an aggregate condition to prevent an overflow or something in the state accumulation function for a targetlist aggregate, you'd lose. But I don't see any way to avoid that without scanning the data twice, which we're surely not gonna do. regards, tom lane ---------------------------(end of broadcast)--------------------------- TIP 3: Have you checked our extensive FAQ? http://www.postgresql.org/docs/faq