15

As always, there will be a reasonable explanation for my surprise, but till then....

I have this query

delete from Photo  where hs_id  in (select hs_id  from HotelSupplier where id = 142)

which executes just fine (later i found out that the entire photo table was empty)

but the strange thing: there is no field hs_id in HotelSupplier, it is called hs_key!

So when i execute the last part

select hs_id  from HotelSupplier where id = 142

separately (select that part of the query with the mouse and hit F5), i get an error, but when i use it in the in clause, it doesn't!

I wonder if this is normal behaviour?

2 Answers 2

24

It is taking the value of hs_id from the outer query.

It is perfectly valid to have a query that doesn't project any columns from the selected table in its select list.

For example

select 10 from HotelSupplier where id = 142

would return a result set with as many rows as matched the where clause and the value 10 for all rows.

Unqualified column references are resolved from the closest scope outwards so this just gets treated as a correlated sub query.

The result of this query will be to delete all rows from Photo where hs_id is not null as long as HotelSupplier has at least one row where id = 142 (and so the subquery returns at least one row)

It might be a bit clearer if you consider what the effect of this is

delete from Photo  where Photo.hs_id  in (select Photo.hs_id)

This is of course equivalent to

delete from Photo where Photo.hs_id = Photo.hs_id

By the way this is far and away the most common "bug" that I personally have seen erroneously reported on Microsoft Connect. Erland Sommarskog includes it in his wishlist for SET STRICT_CHECKS ON

3
  • 6
    +1 - Just wanted to explicitly point out a good practice in your example - including the table names for each of the columns (two part identifiers) throughout your query. Good practice in general, invaluable practice in delete statements! Jan 4, 2011 at 14:50
  • 1
    Thanks, i didn't know that. imho it's weird though, that (in your simplified version also) the notn-existing 'select Photo.hs_id' doesn't generate an error
    – Michel
    Jan 4, 2011 at 15:39
  • 2
    @Michel - It isn't non existent. It is treated as a correlated sub query and evaluated for each row using the value passed in from the outer query. Jan 4, 2011 at 15:43
1

It's a strong argument for keeping column names consistent between tables. As @Martin says, the SQL syntax allows column names to be resolved from the outer query, when there's no match in the inner query. This is a boon when writing correlated subqueries, but can trip you up sometimes (as here)

2
  • yeah, absolutely agree, the consistnecy in this db is far away. textkey, textid, text_key, text_id, hsid, hs_id etc. brrrrr
    – Michel
    Jan 4, 2011 at 15:42
  • Of course, that doesn't help if you type in the wrong table name that doesn't have the right at all
    – Kevin
    Sep 7, 2016 at 12:23

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