Are there any performance issues of using "IN" keyword in SQL statements in places where we can use JOIN?

SELECT xxx
FROM xxx
WHERE ID IN (SELECT Id FROM xxx)
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3 Answers

up vote 9 down vote accepted

No, it's OK to use.

You can write the query above using IN, EXISTS in all RDBMS, some also support INTERSECT.

Semantically this is a semi-join which "give me rows from table A where I have a at least one match in tableB". An INNER JOIN is "give me all matching rows"

So if TableA has 3 rows and TableB has 5 rows that match:

  • an INNER JOIN is 15 rows
  • a semi-join is 3 rows

This is why IN and EXISTS are pushed by me and the other SQL types here: a JOIN is wrong, requires DISTINCT and will be slower.

EXISTS support multiple column JOINs, IN doesn't in SQL Server (it does in others).

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It is not ok to use. See my answer. – t-clausen.dk Aug 6 '11 at 12:45
@T-clausen.dk : I have, you're wrong – gbn Aug 6 '11 at 13:08
Yes, I am wrong. I was trying to prove i was right by making you an example. However the example showed i was wrong. I appologize and removed my answer. – t-clausen.dk Aug 6 '11 at 13:37
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Rather than a distinct you could use group by. I have had cases where I got better response time using join. Typically when I am joining all the rows via a primary key / foreign key relationship and the where is looking at a non key column. Especially if multiple joins. The IN can SOMETIMES force an index scan and the join will TYPICALLY use a seek if it is going to the PK. When you design you tables line up the primary keys so they are in the same order and explicitly declare the PK / FK relationships. Join are NOT limited to PK / FK. But a common use of a join is to walk the PK / FK relationship and in that case my experience using a join with the keys aligned is the best performance.

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As you can read here, JOINS are faster than sub-selects.

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As you can read else where, JOINs are slower. explainextended.com/2009/06/16/in-vs-join-vs-exists The semantics are way different -1 for propogating rubbish and not knowing the difference – gbn Aug 6 '11 at 10:36
And your link doesn't even mention this either – gbn Aug 6 '11 at 10:44
it's really intresting, thank you! – Alex_L Aug 6 '11 at 13:03
+1 for initiating this topic. This discussion helps me a lot. Interesting... – OshadhaNad Aug 19 '11 at 22:15
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