Automate schema migrations using DizzleORM and GitHub Actions - Manage thousands of tenants with this workflow

PostgreSQL Correlated Subquery

Summary: in this tutorial, you will learn about PostgreSQL correlated subquery to perform a query that depends on the values of the current row being processed.

Introduction to PostgreSQL correlated subquery

In PostgreSQL, a correlated subquery is a subquery that references the columns from the outer query.

Unlike a regular subquery, PostgreSQL evaluates the correlated subquery once for each row processed by the outer query.

Since PostgreSQL reevaluates the correlated subquery for every row in the outer query, this may lead to performance issues, especially when dealing with large datasets.

A correlated subquery can be useful when you need to perform a query that depends on the values of the current being processed.

PostgreSQL correlated subquery example

We’ll use the film table from the sample database for the demonstration:

The following example uses a correlated subquery to find the films with higher lengths than average for their respective ratings:

SELECT film_id, title, length, rating
FROM film f
WHERE length > (
    SELECT AVG(length)
    FROM film
    WHERE rating = f.rating
);

Output:

film_id |            title            | length | rating
---------+-----------------------------+--------+--------
     133 | Chamber Italian             |    117 | NC-17
       4 | Affair Prejudice            |    117 | G
       5 | African Egg                 |    130 | G
       6 | Agent Truman                |    169 | PG
...

How it works.

The outer query retrieves id, title, length, and rating from the film table that has the alias f:

SELECT film_id, title, length, rating
FROM film f
WHERE length > (...)

For each row processed by the outer query, the correlated subquery calculates the average length of films that have the same rating as the current row (f.rating).

The WHERE clause (WHERE length > (...)) checks if the length of the current film is greater than the average.

The correlated subquery calculates the average length for films with the same rating as the current row in the outer query:

SELECT AVG(length)
FROM film
WHERE rating = f.rating

The WHERE clause ensures that the correlated subquery considers only films with the same rating as the current row in the outer query. The condition rating = f.rating creates the correlation.

As a result, the outer query returns rows where the length of the film is greater than the average length for films with the same rating.

Summary

  • Use a correlated subquery to perform a query that depends on the values of the current row being processed.

Last updated on

Was this page helpful?