Oracle - Not frequently used features
WITH Clause : Subquery Factoring
TheWITH
clause, or subquery factoring clause, is part
of the SQL-99 standard and was added into the Oracle SQL syntax in
Oracle 9.2. The WITH clause may be processed as an inline view or
resolved as a temporary table. The advantage of the latter is that
repeated references to the subquery may be more efficient as the data is
easily retrieved from the temporary table, rather than being requeried
by each reference. You should assess the performance implications of the
WITH clause on a case-by-case basis.Using the SCOTT schema, for each employee we want to know how many other people are in their department. Using an inline view we might do the following.
SELECT e.ename AS employee_name,
dc.dept_count AS emp_dept_count
FROM emp e,
(SELECT deptno, COUNT(*) AS dept_count
FROM emp
GROUP BY deptno) dc
WHERE e.deptno = dc.deptno;
Using a
WITH
clause this would look like the following.
WITH dept_count AS (
SELECT deptno, COUNT(*) AS dept_count
FROM emp
GROUP BY deptno)
SELECT e.ename AS employee_name,
dc.dept_count AS emp_dept_count
FROM emp e,
dept_count dc
WHERE e.deptno = dc.deptno;
The difference seems rather insignificant here.
What if we also want to pull back each employees manager name and the number of people in the managers department? Using the inline view it now looks like this.
SELECT e.ename AS employee_name,
dc1.dept_count AS emp_dept_count,
m.ename AS manager_name,
dc2.dept_count AS mgr_dept_count
FROM emp e,
(SELECT deptno, COUNT(*) AS dept_count
FROM emp
GROUP BY deptno) dc1,
emp m,
(SELECT deptno, COUNT(*) AS dept_count
FROM emp
GROUP BY deptno) dc2
WHERE e.deptno = dc1.deptno
AND e.mgr = m.empno
AND m.deptno = dc2.deptno;
Using the
WITH
clause this would look like the following.
WITH dept_count AS (
SELECT deptno, COUNT(*) AS dept_count
FROM emp
GROUP BY deptno)
SELECT e.ename AS employee_name,
dc1.dept_count AS emp_dept_count,
m.ename AS manager_name,
dc2.dept_count AS mgr_dept_count
FROM emp e,
dept_count dc1,
emp m,
dept_count dc2
WHERE e.deptno = dc1.deptno
AND e.mgr = m.empno
AND m.deptno = dc2.deptno;
So we don't need to redefine the same subquery multiple times. Instead we just use the query name defined in the
WITH
clause, making the query much easier to read.If the contents of the
WITH
clause is sufficiently
complex, Oracle may decide to resolve the result of the subquery into a
global temporary table. This can make multiple references to the
subquery more efficient. The MATERIALIZE
and INLINE
optimizer hints can be used to influence the decision. The undocumented MATERIALIZE
hint tells the optimizer to resolve the subquery as a global temporary table, while the INLINE
hint tells it to process the query inline.
WITH dept_count AS (
SELECT /*+ MATERIALIZE */ deptno, COUNT(*) AS dept_count
FROM emp
GROUP BY deptno)
SELECT ...
WITH dept_count AS (
SELECT /*+ INLINE */ deptno, COUNT(*) AS dept_count
FROM emp
GROUP BY deptno)
SELECT ...
Even when there is no repetition of SQL, the
WITH
clause can simplify complex queries, like the following example that lists those departments with above average wages.
WITH
dept_costs AS (
SELECT dname, SUM(sal) dept_total
FROM emp e, dept d
WHERE e.deptno = d.deptno
GROUP BY dname),
avg_cost AS (
SELECT SUM(dept_total)/COUNT(*) avg
FROM dept_costs)
SELECT *
FROM dept_costs
WHERE dept_total > (SELECT avg FROM avg_cost)
ORDER BY dname;
In the previous example, the main body of the query is very simple, with the complexity hidden in the
WITH
clause.
0 Comments:
Post a Comment
Subscribe to Post Comments [Atom]
<< Home