248

I have a simple SQL query in PostgreSQL 8.3 that grabs a bunch of comments. I provide a sorted list of values to the IN construct in the WHERE clause:

SELECT * FROM comments WHERE (comments.id IN (1,3,2,4));

This returns comments in an arbitrary order which in my happens to be ids like 1,2,3,4.

I want the resulting rows sorted like the list in the IN construct: (1,3,2,4).
How to achieve that?

3
  • 1
    And I'd prefer not to create a new table just for the sorting (despite the SQL purity).
    – nutcracker
    May 15, 2009 at 0:11
  • 3
    I've got a bunch of answers now. Can I get some voting and comments so I know which is the winner! Thanks All :-)
    – nutcracker
    May 15, 2009 at 1:01
  • 1
    After reviewing 12 different solutions, the answer provided by @Erwin Brandstetter absolutely works wonderfully. Aug 19, 2022 at 21:36

17 Answers 17

136

You can do it quite easily with (introduced in PostgreSQL 8.2) VALUES (), ().

Syntax will be like this:

select c.*
from comments c
join (
  values
    (1,1),
    (3,2),
    (2,3),
    (4,4)
) as x (id, ordering) on c.id = x.id
order by x.ordering
2
  • 4
    @user80168 What if there are thousands values in IN clause? because I have got to do it for thousands records
    – kamal
    Oct 20, 2016 at 10:35
  • @kamal For that I have used with ordered_products as (select row_number() OVER (ORDER BY whatever) as reportingorder, id from comments) ... ORDER BY reportingorder.
    – Noumenon
    Mar 24, 2019 at 16:27
117

Use WITH ORDINALITY in Postgres 9.4 or later.

SELECT c.*
FROM   comments c
JOIN   unnest('{1,3,2,4}'::int[]) WITH ORDINALITY t(id, ord) USING (id)
ORDER  BY t.ord;
  • No need for a subquery, we can use the set-returning function like a table directly - a.k.a. "table-function".

  • A string literal to pass the array instead of an ARRAY constructor may be easier to implement with some clients.

  • For convenience (optionally), match the column name we are joining to ("id" in the example), so we can join with a short USING clause and only get a single instance of the join column in the result.

  • Works with any input type. If your key column is of type text, provide something like '{foo,bar,baz}'::text[].

Detailed explanation:

8
  • ODBC Error for me unfortunately: ODBC ERROR: <4>, Inter code: <7> Native Err#=1 , SQLSTATE=42601, Error_Info='ERROR: syntax error at or near "NULLNULL"; Error while preparing parameters'
    – Pipo
    Aug 8, 2020 at 20:52
  • 4
    This is the best answer.
    – Dex
    Oct 6, 2020 at 0:28
  • 4
    This is the way. BTW you can also do JOIN UNNEST(ARRAY['B','C','A']::text[]) WITH ORDINALITY t(id, ord) USING (id) in case you want to order according to a list of strings instead of integers.
    – vreyespue
    Apr 13, 2021 at 9:20
  • 1
    You can use LEFT OUTER JOIN to include records outside of the array. They will be ordered after the array of records. Append other columns to ORDER BY to control their order.
    – ryanb
    Nov 30, 2022 at 20:36
  • 1
    How would this be implemented in SQLAlchemy?
    – mp252
    Feb 22, 2023 at 16:17
75

With Postgres 9.4 this can be done a bit shorter:

select c.*
from comments c
join (
  select *
  from unnest(array[43,47,42]) with ordinality
) as x (id, ordering) on c.id = x.id
order by x.ordering;

Or a bit more compact without a derived table:

select c.*
from comments c
  join unnest(array[43,47,42]) with ordinality as x (id, ordering) 
    on c.id = x.id
order by x.ordering

Removing the need to manually assign/maintain a position to each value.

With Postgres 9.6 this can be done using array_position():

with x (id_list) as (
  values (array[42,48,43])
)
select c.*
from comments c, x
where id = any (x.id_list)
order by array_position(x.id_list, c.id);

The CTE is used so that the list of values only needs to be specified once. If that is not important this can also be written as:

select c.*
from comments c
where id in (42,48,43)
order by array_position(array[42,48,43], c.id);
5
  • This does not repeat the whole IN list from the WHERE clause again in the ORDER BY clause, which makes this the best answer imho... Now only to find something similar for MySQL... Dec 21, 2015 at 10:14
  • 1
    My favorite answer but note that array_position does not work with bigint and you'd need to cast: order by array_position(array[42,48,43], c.id::int); which, may lead to bugs in some cases.
    – aaandre
    Sep 27, 2019 at 19:53
  • 3
    @aaandre The following casting is working fine (in Postgres 12 at least) array_position(array[42, 48, 43]::bigint[], c.id::bigint), so no need to truncate bigint to int.
    – Vic
    May 1, 2020 at 10:44
  • 1
    If someone consider performance I really do not recommend array_position! I did some tests for 100k rows. array_position with TEXT array took about 15min, with INT about 5min and using join unnest 1,5min where the query without sorting is taking something above 1min.
    – klaxon
    Mar 22, 2022 at 11:45
  • I was tempted by the simplicity of array_position but also found it slower than join unnest. It is about 50% slower in my brief testing on int ids.
    – ryanb
    Nov 30, 2022 at 20:27
74

Just because it is so difficult to find and it has to be spread: in mySQL this can be done much simpler, but I don't know if it works in other SQL.

SELECT * FROM `comments`
WHERE `comments`.`id` IN ('12','5','3','17')
ORDER BY FIELD(`comments`.`id`,'12','5','3','17')
2
  • 3
    The list of values has to be provided twice, in two different ways. Not so simple. The accepted answer only needs it once (even if in a more verbose fashion). And it's even simpler with modern Postgres (as demonstrated in newer answers). Also, this question seems to be about Postgres after all. Mar 5, 2016 at 0:29
  • 10
    ERROR: cannot pass more than 100 arguments to a function
    – brauliobo
    Jun 22, 2016 at 13:15
50

I think this way is better :

SELECT * FROM "comments" WHERE ("comments"."id" IN (1,3,2,4))
    ORDER BY  id=1 DESC, id=3 DESC, id=2 DESC, id=4 DESC
8
  • 1
    I was able to do this with bound values, i.e.: ... order by id=? desc, id=? desc, id=? desc and it seems to work fine :-)
    – KajMagnus
    Mar 15, 2014 at 8:54
  • Works in postgres and seems to be the best solution! Oct 8, 2015 at 13:58
  • This solution did the trick for me, but: Did anyone research how this solution is doing performance-wise? It does add multple order by clauses. Therefore it may (i didnt test it yet) get slower exponentially with increasing number of order-ids? Any information on this would be highly appreciated!
    – Fabian S.
    Aug 15, 2016 at 8:20
  • 1
    ERROR: target lists can have at most 1664 entries -> when you try to run long query... Oct 13, 2016 at 0:49
  • @Manngo MS SQL. Can't remember which version. Might have been 2012.
    – biko
    May 8, 2018 at 9:21
36

In Postgresql:

select *
from comments
where id in (1,3,2,4)
order by position(id::text in '1,3,2,4')
4
  • 5
    Hum... it bugs if position(id::text in '123,345,3,678'). The id 3 will match before the id 345, dont it?
    – alanjds
    Apr 11, 2014 at 21:49
  • 6
    I think you are right and would need to have both a start and end delimiter then, maybe like: order by position(','||id::text||',' in ',1,3,2,4,') Jun 9, 2014 at 23:13
  • @MichaelRush This doesn't seem to work 100% either. For example, if there is (11, 1), the 1 will get displayed first.
    – Dex
    Oct 6, 2020 at 0:08
  • If we want that the result order should be "11, 1, 10, and all other by asc" we can write a such expression: order by position(','||id::text||',' in ',10,1,11,') desc, id asc . Pay attention with trick of reverse order in string + desc sort. It is because position of id=2 in this string will cast to 0.
    – FlameStorm
    Jun 30, 2023 at 19:59
31

Another way to do it in Postgres would be to use the idx function.

SELECT *
FROM comments
ORDER BY idx(array[1,3,2,4], comments.id)

Don't forget to create the idx function first, as described here: http://wiki.postgresql.org/wiki/Array_Index

5
  • 12
    This function is now available in an extension that comes with PostgreSQL: postgresql.org/docs/9.2/static/intarray.html Install it with CREATE EXTENSION intarray;.
    – Alex Kahn
    Aug 28, 2014 at 16:32
  • 1
    Just piling on further, for Amazon RDS users, the ROR migration function enable_extension will let you activate this so long as your app user is a member of the rds_superuser group.
    – Dave S.
    Aug 6, 2015 at 15:39
  • in PG 9.6.2 PG::UndefinedFunction: ERROR: function idx(integer[], integer) does not exist Apr 13, 2017 at 9:18
  • Thank you, best answer when combined with @AlexKahn's comment
    – Andrew
    Nov 9, 2017 at 14:37
  • Unfortunately this solution doesn't work with bigint type
    – across
    Oct 12, 2023 at 10:57
3

On researching this some more I found this solution:

SELECT * FROM "comments" WHERE ("comments"."id" IN (1,3,2,4)) 
ORDER BY CASE "comments"."id"
WHEN 1 THEN 1
WHEN 3 THEN 2
WHEN 2 THEN 3
WHEN 4 THEN 4
END

However this seems rather verbose and might have performance issues with large datasets. Can anyone comment on these issues?

3
  • 8
    Sure, I can comment on them. There are things SQL is good at, and things it is not good at. SQL is not good at this. Just sort the results in whatever language you're making the queries from; it will save you much wailing and gnashing of teeth. SQL is a set-oriented language, and sets are not ordered collections.
    – kquinn
    May 15, 2009 at 0:24
  • Hmmm ... Is that based on personal experience and testing? My tested experience is that this is a quite effective technique for ordering. (However, the accepted answer is better overall because it eliminates the "IN (...)" clause). Remember that for any reasonable result set size, deriving the set should be the expensive part. Once it's down to several hundred records or less, sorting is trivial.
    – dkretz
    Jun 5, 2009 at 15:52
  • What if there are thousands values in IN clause? because I have got to do it for thousands records.
    – kamal
    Oct 20, 2016 at 10:34
2

To do this, I think you should probably have an additional "ORDER" table which defines the mapping of IDs to order (effectively doing what your response to your own question said), which you can then use as an additional column on your select which you can then sort on.

In that way, you explicitly describe the ordering you desire in the database, where it should be.

1
  • This seems like the right way to do it. However I'd like to create that ordering table on the fly. I've suggested using a constant table in one of the answers. Is this going to be performant when I'm dealing with hundreds or thousands of comments?
    – nutcracker
    May 15, 2009 at 1:14
2

sans SEQUENCE, works only on 8.4:

select * from comments c
join 
(
    select id, row_number() over() as id_sorter  
    from (select unnest(ARRAY[1,3,2,4]) as id) as y
) x on x.id = c.id
order by x.id_sorter
1
SELECT * FROM "comments" JOIN (
  SELECT 1 as "id",1 as "order" UNION ALL 
  SELECT 3,2 UNION ALL SELECT 2,3 UNION ALL SELECT 4,4
) j ON "comments"."id" = j."id" ORDER BY j.ORDER

or if you prefer evil over good:

SELECT * FROM "comments" WHERE ("comments"."id" IN (1,3,2,4))
ORDER BY POSITION(','+"comments"."id"+',' IN ',1,3,2,4,')
0
0

And here's another solution that works and uses a constant table (http://www.postgresql.org/docs/8.3/interactive/sql-values.html):

SELECT * FROM comments AS c,
(VALUES (1,1),(3,2),(2,3),(4,4) ) AS t (ord_id,ord)
WHERE (c.id IN (1,3,2,4)) AND (c.id = t.ord_id)
ORDER BY ord

But again I'm not sure that this is performant.

I've got a bunch of answers now. Can I get some voting and comments so I know which is the winner!

Thanks All :-)

1
  • 1
    your answer is almost the same with depesz, just remove the c.ID IN (1,3,2,4). anyway his is better, he uses JOIN, as much as possible use the ANSI SQL way of joining, don't use table comma table. i should have read your answer carefully, i'm having a hard time figuring out how to alias the two columns, first i tried this: (values(1,1) as x(id,sort_order), (3,2), (2,3), (4,4)) as y. but to no avail :-D your answer could have provided me a clue if i've read it carefully :-) May 15, 2009 at 9:44
0
create sequence serial start 1;

select * from comments c
join (select unnest(ARRAY[1,3,2,4]) as id, nextval('serial') as id_sorter) x
on x.id = c.id
order by x.id_sorter;

drop sequence serial;

[EDIT]

unnest is not yet built-in in 8.3, but you can create one yourself(the beauty of any*):

create function unnest(anyarray) returns setof anyelement
language sql as
$$
    select $1[i] from generate_series(array_lower($1,1),array_upper($1,1)) i;
$$;

that function can work in any type:

select unnest(array['John','Paul','George','Ringo']) as beatle
select unnest(array[1,3,2,4]) as id
2
  • Thanks Michael but the unnest function doesn't seem to exist for my PSQL and I can't find any mention of it in the docs either. Is it 8.4 only?
    – nutcracker
    May 15, 2009 at 1:26
  • unnest is not yet built-in in 8.3, but you can implement one yourself. see the code above May 15, 2009 at 2:09
0

Slight improvement over the version that uses a sequence I think:

CREATE OR REPLACE FUNCTION in_sort(anyarray, out id anyelement, out ordinal int)
LANGUAGE SQL AS
$$
    SELECT $1[i], i FROM generate_series(array_lower($1,1),array_upper($1,1)) i;
$$;

SELECT 
    * 
FROM 
    comments c
    INNER JOIN (SELECT * FROM in_sort(ARRAY[1,3,2,4])) AS in_sort
        USING (id)
ORDER BY in_sort.ordinal;
0
select * from comments where comments.id in 
(select unnest(ids) from bbs where id=19795) 
order by array_position((select ids from bbs where id=19795),comments.id)

here, [bbs] is the main table that has a field called ids, and, ids is the array that store the comments.id .

passed in postgresql 9.6

2
  • did you test this query? Jun 6, 2017 at 11:29
  • here, remember, ids is an array type, like, {1,2,3,4}. Jun 6, 2017 at 12:26
0

Lets get a visual impression about what was already said. For example you have a table with some tasks:

SELECT a.id,a.status,a.description FROM minicloud_tasks as a ORDER BY random();

 id |   status   |   description    
----+------------+------------------
  4 | processing | work on postgres
  6 | deleted    | need some rest
  3 | pending    | garden party
  5 | completed  | work on html

And you want to order the list of tasks by its status. The status is a list of string values:

(processing, pending,  completed, deleted)

The trick is to give each status value an interger and order the list numerical:

SELECT a.id,a.status,a.description FROM minicloud_tasks AS a
  JOIN (
    VALUES ('processing', 1), ('pending', 2), ('completed', 3), ('deleted', 4)
  ) AS b (status, id) ON (a.status = b.status)
  ORDER BY b.id ASC;

Which leads to:

 id |   status   |   description    
----+------------+------------------
  4 | processing | work on postgres
  3 | pending    | garden party
  5 | completed  | work on html
  6 | deleted    | need some rest

Credit @user80168

-4

I agree with all other posters that say "don't do that" or "SQL isn't good at that". If you want to sort by some facet of comments then add another integer column to one of your tables to hold your sort criteria and sort by that value. eg "ORDER BY comments.sort DESC " If you want to sort these in a different order every time then... SQL won't be for you in this case.

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