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I am using pgadmin for PostgreSQL (9.1) and I have this query which takes too long to run

update tableA a
set owner1_surname = (select owner_surname from owners_distinct b where a.owner1= b.owner),
owner1_othername   = (select owner_othername from owners_distinct b where a.owner1= b.owner),
owner2_surname     = (select owner_surname from owners_distinct b where a.owner2= b.owner),
owner2_othername   = (select owner_othername from owners_distinct b where a.owner2= b.owner),
owner3_surname     = (select owner_surname from owners_distinct b where a.owner3= b.owner),
owner3_othername   = (select owner_othername from owners_distinct b where a.owner3= b.owner)

Instead of having to retrieve the values from owners_distinct table again and again, is it possible to retrieve the columns owner, owner_surname and owner_othername just once using SELECT and then do UPDATE on tableA's columns based on the check?

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2 Answers 2

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This is trickier than I first thought, since you want to join the same table multiple times, and the only connection is the updated table itself:

UPDATE table_a a
    SET owner1_surname = b1.owner_surname
    ,owner1_othername  = b1.owner_othername
    ,owner2_surname    = b2.owner_surname
    ,owner2_othername  = b2.owner_othername
    ,owner3_surname    = b3.owner_surname
    ,owner3_othername  = b3.owner_othername
FROM   table_a x
LEFT   JOIN owners_distinct b1 ON b1.b.owner = x.owner1
LEFT   JOIN owners_distinct b2 ON b2.b.owner = x.owner2 
LEFT   JOIN owners_distinct b2 ON b3.b.owner = x.owner3
WHERE  x.table_a_id = a.table_a_id

Where table_a_id is the primary key of table_a. Normally you don't have to join the table another time, but in this situation you need it for the join before you can link to the updated table.

I use LEFT JOIN, in order to prevent the whole update for a row from failing if one of the three owners cannot be found in owners_distinct.

Database design

Are you sure you need all the redundant data in table_a? The canonical way in a normalized schema would be to only store the foreign keys (owner1, owner2, owner3), and fetch details of the name on demand with a JOIN in a SELECT. Remove all those columns you are updating altogether. Of course, there are always exceptions to the rule ...

No unique key?

This shouldn't happen to begin with. You should add a surrogate primary key like:

ALTER TABLE table_a ADD table_a_id serial PRIMARY KEY;

More about that in the related answer:
Do I need a primary key for my table, which has a UNIQUE (composite 4-columns), one of which can be NULL?

Solution without unique key

Anyway, here is a way to make this update regardless of any unique column:

UPDATE table_a a
    SET owner1_surname = b1.owner_surname
    ,owner1_othername  = b1.owner_othername
    ,owner2_surname    = b2.owner_surname
    ,owner2_othername  = b2.owner_othername
    ,owner3_surname    = b3.owner_surname
    ,owner3_othername  = b3.owner_othername
FROM   (SELECT DISTINCT owner1, owner2, owner3 FROM table_a) x
LEFT   JOIN owners_distinct b1 ON b1.b.owner = x.owner1
LEFT   JOIN owners_distinct b2 ON b2.b.owner = x.owner2 
LEFT   JOIN owners_distinct b2 ON b3.b.owner = x.owner3
WHERE  x.owner1 = a.owner1
AND    x.owner2 = a.owner2
AND    x.owner3 = a.owner3;

The point is: we only need each combination of (owner1, owner2, owner3) once.

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  • 2
    @CCGooner: Every table should have a primary key. This one doesn't? Either way, any unique combination of columns can do the job. The whole row if need be. Just avoid columns that can be NULL. Mar 26, 2013 at 2:31
-1

SELECT owner, owner_surname and owner_othername FROM table_a

UPDATE table_a a

 SET owner1_surname = b1.owner_surname
,owner1_othername  = b1.owner_othername
,owner2_surname    = b2.owner_surname
,owner2_othername  = b2.owner_othername
,owner3_surname    = b3.owner_surname
,owner3_othername  = b3.owner_othername
2
  • I want owner1_surname, owner1_othername to be updated only if table_a.owner1=owners_distinct.owner and same for owner2surname, owner2othername and owner3surname, owner3othername
    – CCGooner
    Mar 26, 2013 at 2:38
  • before this code try to put in this condition: IF table_a.owner1=owners_distinct.owner and same for owner2surname, owner2othername and owner3surname, owner3othername
    – StepUp
    Mar 26, 2013 at 2:49

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