Reputation: 55594
I've got a query joining several tables and returning quite a few columns.
An indexed column of another table references the PK of one of these joined tables. Now I would like to add another column to the query that states if at least one row with that ID exists in the new table.
So if I have one of the old tables
ID
1
2
3
and the new table
REF_ID
1
1
1
3
then I'd like to get
ID REF_EXISTS
1 1
2 0
3 1
I can think of several ways to do that, but what is the most elegant/efficient one?
EDIT I tested the performance of the queries provided with 50.000 records in the old table, every other record matched by two rows in the new table, so half of the records have REF_EXISTS=1.
I'm adding average results as comments to the answers in case anyone is interested. Thanks everyone!
Upvotes: 6
Views: 18586
Reputation: 1433
I would:
select distinct ID,
case when exists (select 1 from REF_TABLE where ID_TABLE.ID = REF_TABLE.REF_ID)
then 1 else 0 end
from ID_TABLE
Provided you have indexes on the PK and FK you will get away with a table scan and index lookups.
Regards K
Upvotes: 4
Reputation: 18410
Another option:
select O.ID
, case when N.ref_id is not null then 1 else 0 end as ref_exists
from old_table o
left outer join (select distinct ref_id from new_table) N
on O.id = N.ref_id
Upvotes: 9
Reputation: 332731
Use:
SELECT DISTINCT t1.id,
CASE WHEN t2.ref_id IS NULL THEN 0 ELSE 1 END AS REF_EXISTS
FROM TABLE_1 t1
LEFT JOIN TABLE_2 t2 ON t2.ref_id = t1.id
Added DISTINCT
to ensure only unique rows are displayed.
Upvotes: 2
Reputation: 238276
A join
could return multiple rows for one id, as it does for id=1
in the example data. You can limit it to one row per id with a group by:
SELECT
t1.id
, COUNT(DISTINCT t2.ref_id) as REF_EXISTS
FROM TABLE_1 t1
LEFT JOIN TABLE_2 t2 ON t2.ref_id = t1.id
GROUP BY t1.id
The group by
ensures there's only one row per id. And count(distinct t2.ref_id)
will be 1 if a row is found and 0 otherwise.
EDIT: You can rewrite it without a group by
, but I doubt that will make things easer:
SELECT
t1.id
, CASE WHEN EXISTS (
SELECT * FROM TABLE_2 t2 WHERE t2.ref_id = t1.id)
THEN 1 ELSE 0 END as REF_EXISTS
, ....
FROM TABLE_1 t1
Upvotes: 1