What is the difference between IN
and ANY
operator in PostgreSQL?
The working mechanism of both seems to be the same. Can anyone explain this with an example?
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4Possible duplicate of postgreSQL - in vs any– Vivek S.Jan 6, 2016 at 6:47
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Does this answer your question? Difference between in and any operators in sql– philipxyFeb 16, 2020 at 11:06
3 Answers
(Strictly speaking, IN
and ANY
are Postgres "constructs" or "syntax elements", rather than "operators".)
Logically, quoting the manual:
IN
is equivalent to= ANY
.
But there are two syntax variants of IN
and two variants of ANY
. Details:
IN
taking a set is equivalent to = ANY
taking a set, as demonstrated here:
But the second variant of each is subtly different. The second variant of the ANY
construct takes an array (must be an actual array type), while the second variant of IN
takes a comma-separated list of values. This leads to different restrictions in passing values and can also lead to different query plans in special cases:
- Index not used with
=any()
but used within
- Pass multiple sets or arrays of values to a function
- How to match elements in an array of composite type?
ANY
is more versatile
The ANY
construct is far more versatile, as it can be combined with various operators, not just =
. Example:
SELECT 'foo' LIKE ANY('{FOO,bar,%oo%}');
For a big number of values, providing a set scales better for each:
Related:
Inversion / opposite / exclusion
"Find rows where id
is in the given array":
SELECT * FROM tbl WHERE id = ANY (ARRAY[1, 2]);
Inversion: "Find rows where id
is not in the array":
SELECT * FROM tbl WHERE id <> ALL (ARRAY[1, 2]);
SELECT * FROM tbl WHERE id <> ALL ('{1, 2}'); -- equivalent array literal
SELECT * FROM tbl WHERE NOT (id = ANY ('{1, 2}'));
All three equivalent. The first with ARRAY constructor, the other two with array literal. The type of the untyped array literal is derived from (known) element type to the left.
In other constellations (typed array value / you want a different type / ARRAY constructor for a non-default type) you may need to cast explicitly.
Rows with id IS NULL
do not pass either of these expressions. To include NULL
values additionally:
SELECT * FROM tbl WHERE (id = ANY ('{1, 2}')) IS NOT TRUE;
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7It'd be nice to explicitly clarify that the results of the second variants will always be the same. I'm 99% sure that is in fact the case but the answer doesn't seem to state it. Meaning that
SELECT * from mytable where id in (1, 2, 3)
will always result in the same rows asSELECT * from mytable where id = ANY('{1, 2, 3}')
, even if they potentially might have different query plans.– KPDApr 8, 2018 at 23:44 -
2
ANY
cannot be combined with the!=
operator. I don't think it's documented, butselect * from foo where id != ANY (ARRAY[1, 2])
is not the same asselect * from foo where id NOT IN (1, 2)
. On the other hand,select * from foo where NOT (id = ANY (ARRAY[1, 2]))
works as expected.– qrisDec 7, 2018 at 12:36 -
1@qris:
ANY
can be combined with the!=
operator. But there is more to it. I added a chapter above. (Note that<>
is the operator in standard SQL - though!=
is accepted as well in Postgres.) Feb 7, 2019 at 12:24 -
How does the last version that includes
NULL
values work? WouldWHERE id = ANY (ARRAY[1, 2]) OR id IS NULL;
work just as well?– davidtgqFeb 1, 2020 at 4:30 -
2@dvtan:
(id = ...) IS NOT TRUE
works becauseid = ...
only evaluates toTRUE
if there is an actual match. OutcomesFALSE
orNULL
pass our test. See: stackoverflow.com/a/23767625/939860. Your added expression tests for something else. This would be equivalentWHERE id <> ALL (ARRAY[1, 2]) OR id IS NULL;
Feb 3, 2020 at 23:17
There are two obvious points, as well as the points in the other answer:
They are exactly equivalent when using sub queries:
SELECT * FROM table WHERE column IN(subquery); SELECT * FROM table WHERE column = ANY(subquery);
On the other hand:
Only the
IN
operator allows a simple list:SELECT * FROM table WHERE column IN(… , … , …);
Presuming they are exactly the same has caught me out several times when forgetting that ANY
doesn’t work with lists.
'in'
is syntaxis sugar, you can take a look to plan analyse and will see that 'in'
will be transform to =ANY('...,...')::yourType[]