It is possible to put more than 1000 items in the SQL IN clause? We have been getting issues with our Oracle database not being able to handle it.
IF yes, how do we put more than 1000 items in the SQL IN clause?
IF not, what else can I do?
It is possible to put more than 1000 items in the SQL IN clause? We have been getting issues with our Oracle database not being able to handle it.
IF yes, how do we put more than 1000 items in the SQL IN clause?
IF not, what else can I do?
There's another workaround for this that isn't mentioned in any of the other answers (or other answered questions):
Any in statement like x in (1,2,3)
can be rewritten as (1,x) in ((1,1), (1,2), (1,3))
and the 1000 element limit will no longer apply. I've tested with an index on x
and explain plan still reports that Oracle is using an access predicate and range scan.
You should transform the IN clauses to INNER JOIN clauses.
You can transform a query like this one
SELECT foo
FROM bar
WHERE bar.stuff IN
(SELECT stuff FROM asdf)
in a query like this other one.
SELECT b.foo
FROM (
SELECT DISTINCT stuff
FROM asdf ) a
JOIN bar b
ON b.stuff = a.stuff
You will also gain a lot of performance
We can have more than one "IN" statement for the same variable.
For ex:
select val
from table
where val in (1,2,3,...)
or
val in (7,8,9,....)
If you don't have the luxury of creating a temp table, you can simulate it using the WITH clause
with t as (
select 1 val from dual
union all select 2 from dual
union all select 3 from dual
...
union all select 5001 from dual
union all select 5002 from dual
)
select *
from mytable
where col1 in (select val from t)
Obviously, you could also join mytable to t
I like Gordy's answer best, just showing another way.
Collections can have more than 1000 items.
Create a collection data type:
CREATE TYPE number_list IS TABLE OF NUMBER;
Then you can use the MEMBER OF
operator:
SELECT *
FROM table_name
WHERE id MEMBER OF number_list(1,2,3,4 /*,...*/ ,7999,8000)
or IN
with a table collection expression:
SELECT *
FROM table_name
WHERE id IN (
SELECT COLUMN_VALUE
FROM TABLE(number_list(1,2,3,4 /*,...*/ ,7999,8000))
)
or, some languages (such as Java - example) can pass arrays as SQL collections using bind variables:
SELECT *
FROM table_name
WHERE id MEMBER OF :your_array
Another way:
SELECT COL1, COL2, COL3 FROM YOUR_TABLE
WHERE 1=1
AND COL2 IN (
SELECT VAL1 as FAKE FROM DUAL
UNION
SELECT VAL2 as FAKE FROM DUAL
UNION
SELECT VAL3 as FAKE FROM DUAL
--...
)
values
as table constructor until 21c. Can you please share the link to the documentation?
values
5 years ago and half a year ago again.