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Predicates

Predicates are truth-tests.

Predicates are truth-tests. If the predicate test is true, it returns a value. Each predicate is evaluated per row, so that when the predicate is part of an entire table SELECT statement, the statement can return multiple results.

Predicates consist of a set of parameters and arguments. For example, in the following WHERE clause:

WHERE name = 'Smith'
  • name = 'Smith' is the predicate

  • 'Smith' is an expression

1 - ANY and ALL

ANY and ALL are logical operators that let you make comparisons on subqueries that return one or more rows.

ANY and ALL are logical operators that let you make comparisons on subqueries that return one or more rows. Both operators must be preceded by a comparison operator and followed by a subquery:

expression comparison-operator { ANY | ALL } (subquery)
  • ANY returns true if the comparison between expression and any value returned by subquery evaluates to true.
  • ALL returns true only if the comparison between expression and all values returned by subquery evaluates to true.

Equivalent operators

You can use the following operators instead of ANY or ALL:

This operator... Is equivalent to:
SOME ANY
IN = ANY
NOT IN <> ALL

NULL handling

Vertica supports multicolumn <> ALL subqueries where the columns are not marked NOT NULL. If any column contains a NULL value, Vertica returns a run-time error.

Vertica does not support ANY subqueries that are nested in another expression if any column values are NULL.

Examples

Examples below use the following tables and data:

=> SELECT * FROM t1 ORDER BY c1;
 c1 | c2
----+-----
  1 | cab
  1 | abc
  2 | fed
  2 | def
  3 | ihg
  3 | ghi
  4 | jkl
  5 | mno
(8 rows)
=> SELECT * FROM t2 ORDER BY c1;
 c1 | c2
----+-----
  1 | abc
  2 | fed
  3 | jkl
  3 | stu
  3 | zzz
(5 rows)

ANY subqueries

Subqueries that use the ANY keyword return true when any value retrieved in the subquery matches the value of the left-hand expression.

ANY subquery within an expression:

=> SELECT c1, c2 FROM t1 WHERE COALESCE((t1.c1 > ANY (SELECT c1 FROM t2)));
 c1 | c2
----+-----
  2 | fed
  2 | def
  3 | ihg
  3 | ghi
  4 | jkl
  5 | mno
(6 rows)

ANY noncorrelated subqueries without aggregates:

=> SELECT c1 FROM t1 WHERE c1 = ANY (SELECT c1 FROM t2) ORDER BY c1;
 c1
----
  1
  1
  2
  2
  3
  3
(6 rows)

ANY noncorrelated subqueries with aggregates:

=> SELECT c1, c2 FROM t1 WHERE c1 <> ANY (SELECT MAX(c1) FROM t2) ORDER BY c1;
 c1 | c2
----+-----
  1 | cab
  1 | abc
  2 | fed
  2 | def
  4 | jkl
  5 | mno
(6 rows)

=> SELECT c1 FROM t1 GROUP BY c1 HAVING c1 <> ANY (SELECT MAX(c1) FROM t2) ORDER BY c1;
 c1
----
  1
  2
  4
  5
(4 rows)

ANY noncorrelated subqueries with aggregates and a GROUP BY clause:

=> SELECT c1, c2 FROM t1 WHERE c1 <> ANY (SELECT MAX(c1) FROM t2 GROUP BY c2) ORDER BY c1;
 c1 | c2
----+-----
  1 | cab
  1 | abc
  2 | fed
  2 | def
  3 | ihg
  3 | ghi
  4 | jkl
  5 | mno
(8 rows)

ANY noncorrelated subqueries with a GROUP BY clause:

=> SELECT c1, c2 FROM t1 WHERE c1 <=> ANY (SELECT c1 FROM t2 GROUP BY c1) ORDER BY c1;
 c1 | c2
----+-----
  1 | cab
  1 | abc
  2 | fed
  2 | def
  3 | ihg
  3 | ghi
(6 rows)

ANY correlated subqueries with no aggregates or GROUP BY clause:

=> SELECT c1, c2 FROM t1 WHERE c1 >= ANY (SELECT c1 FROM t2 WHERE t2.c2 = t1.c2) ORDER BY c1;
 c1 | c2
----+-----
  1 | abc
  2 | fed
  4 | jkl
(3 rows)

ALL subqueries

A subquery that uses the ALL keyword returns true when all values retrieved by the subquery match the left-hand expression, otherwise it returns false.

ALL noncorrelated subqueries without aggregates:

=> SELECT c1, c2 FROM t1 WHERE c1 >= ALL (SELECT c1 FROM t2) ORDER BY c1;
 c1 | c2
----+-----
  3 | ihg
  3 | ghi
  4 | jkl
  5 | mno
(4 rows)

ALL noncorrelated subqueries with aggregates:

=> SELECT c1, c2 FROM t1 WHERE c1 = ALL (SELECT MAX(c1) FROM t2) ORDER BY c1;
 c1 | c2
----+-----
  3 | ihg
  3 | ghi
(2 rows)

=> SELECT c1 FROM t1 GROUP BY c1 HAVING c1 <> ALL (SELECT MAX(c1) FROM t2) ORDER BY c1;
 c1
----
  1
  2
  4
  5
(4 rows)

ALL noncorrelated subqueries with aggregates and a GROUP BY clause:

=> SELECT c1, c2 FROM t1 WHERE c1 <= ALL (SELECT MAX(c1) FROM t2 GROUP BY c2) ORDER BY c1;
 c1 | c2
----+-----
  1 | cab
  1 | abc
(2 rows)

ALL noncorrelated subqueries with a GROUP BY clause:

=> SELECT c1, c2 FROM t1 WHERE c1 <> ALL (SELECT c1 FROM t2 GROUP BY c1) ORDER BY c1;
 c1 | c2
----+-----
  4 | jkl
  5 | mno
(2 rows)

2 - BETWEEN

Checks whether an expression is within the range of two other expressions, inclusive.

Checks whether an expression is within the range of two other expressions, inclusive. All expressions must be of the same or compatible data types.

Syntax

WHERE a BETWEEN x AND y

Equivalent predicates

The following BETWEEN predicates can be rewritten in conventional SQL with logical operators AND and OR.

This BETWEEN predicate... Is equivalent to...
WHERE aBETWEENxANDy WHERE a>=xANDa<=y
WHERE aNOT BETWEENxANDy WHERE a<xORa>y

Examples

The BETWEEN predicate can be especially useful for querying date ranges, as shown in the following examples:

=> SELECT NOW()::DATE;
    NOW
------------
 2022-12-15
(1 row)

=> CREATE TABLE t1 (a INT, b varchar(12), c DATE);
CREATE TABLE
=> INSERT INTO t1 VALUES
    (0,'today',NOW()),
    (1,'today+1',NOW()+1),
    (2,'today+2',NOW()+2),
    (3,'today+3',NOW()+3),
    (4,'today+4',NOW()+4),
    (5,'today+5',NOW()+5),
    (6,'today+6',NOW()+6);
 OUTPUT
--------
      7
(1 row)

=> COMMIT;
COMMIT
=> SELECT * FROM t1;
 a |    b    |     c
---+---------+------------
 0 | today   | 2022-12-15
 1 | today+1 | 2022-12-16
 2 | today+2 | 2022-12-17
 3 | today+3 | 2022-12-18
 4 | today+4 | 2022-12-19
 5 | today+5 | 2022-12-20
 6 | today+6 | 2022-12-21
(7 rows)

=> SELECT * FROM t1 WHERE c BETWEEN '2022-12-17' AND '2022-12-20';
 a |    b    |     c
---+---------+------------
 2 | today+2 | 2022-12-17
 3 | today+3 | 2022-12-18
 4 | today+4 | 2022-12-19
 5 | today+5 | 2022-12-20
(4 rows)

Use the NOW and INTERVAL keywords to query a date range:

=> SELECT * FROM t1 WHERE c BETWEEN NOW()::DATE AND NOW()::DATE + INTERVAL '2 days';
 a |    b    |     c
---+---------+------------
 0 | today   | 2022-12-15
 1 | today+1 | 2022-12-16
 2 | today+2 | 2022-12-17
(3 rows)

3 - Boolean

Retrieves rows where the value of an expression is true, false, or unknown (NULL).

Retrieves rows where the value of an expression is true, false, or unknown (NULL).

Syntax

expression IS [NOT] TRUE
expression IS [NOT] FALSE
expression IS [NOT] UNKNOWN

Notes

  • NULL input is treated as the value UNKNOWN.
  • IS UNKNOWN and IS NOT UNKNOWN are effectively the same as the NULL predicate, except that the input expression does not have to be a single column value. To check a single column value for NULL, use the NULL predicate.
  • Do not confuse the Boolean predicate with Boolean operators or the Boolean data type, which can have only two values: true and false.

4 - EXISTS

EXISTS and NOT EXISTS predicates compare an expression against a subquery:.

EXISTS and NOT EXISTS predicates compare an expression against a subquery:

  • EXISTS returns true if the subquery returns one or more rows.
  • NOT EXISTS returns true if the subquery returns no rows.

Syntax

expression [ NOT ] EXISTS ( subquery )

Usage

EXISTS results only depend on whether any or no records are returned, and not on the contents of those records. Because the subquery output is usually of no interest, EXISTS tests are commonly written in one of the following ways:

EXISTS (SELECT 1 WHERE...)
EXISTS (SELECT * WHERE...)

In the first case, the subquery returns 1 for every record found by the subquery. For example, the following query retrieves a list of all customers whose store purchases were greater than 550 dollars:

=> SELECT customer_key, customer_name, customer_state
   FROM public.customer_dimension WHERE EXISTS
     (SELECT 1 FROM store.store_sales_fact
      WHERE customer_key = public.customer_dimension.customer_key
      AND sales_dollar_amount > 550)
   AND customer_state = 'MA' ORDER BY customer_key;
 customer_key |     customer_name      | customer_state
--------------+------------------------+----------------
            2 | Anna G. Li              | CA
            4 | Daniel I. Fortin        | TX
            7 | David H. Greenwood      | MA
            8 | Wendy S. Young          | IL
            9 | Theodore X. Brown       | MA
      ...
        49902 | Amy Q. Pavlov          | MA
        49922 | Doug C. Carcetti       | MA
        49930 | Theodore G. McNulty    | MA
        49979 | Ben Z. Miller          | MA
(1058 rows)

EXISTS versus IN

Whether you use EXISTS or IN subqueries depends on which predicates you select in outer and inner query blocks. For example, the following query gets a list of all the orders placed by all stores on January 2, 2007 for vendors with records in the vendor table:

=> SELECT store_key, order_number, date_ordered
   FROM store.store_orders_fact WHERE EXISTS
     (SELECT 1 FROM public.vendor_dimension vd JOIN store.store_orders_fact ord ON vd.vendor_key = ord.vendor_key)
   AND date_ordered = '2007-01-02';
 store_key | order_number | date_ordered
-----------+--------------+--------------
       114 |       271071 | 2007-01-02
        19 |       290888 | 2007-01-02
       132 |        58942 | 2007-01-02
       232 |         9286 | 2007-01-02
       126 |       224474 | 2007-01-02
       196 |        63482 | 2007-01-02
  ...
       196 |        83327 | 2007-01-02
       138 |       278373 | 2007-01-02
       179 |       293586 | 2007-01-02
       155 |       213413 | 2007-01-02
(506 rows)

The above query looks for existence of the vendor and date ordered. To return a particular value, rather than simple existence, the query looks for orders placed by the vendor who got the best deal on January 2, 2007:

=> SELECT store_key, order_number, date_ordered, vendor_name
   FROM store.store_orders_fact ord JOIN public.vendor_dimension vd ON ord.vendor_key = vd.vendor_key
   WHERE vd.deal_size IN (SELECT MAX(deal_size) FROM public.vendor_dimension) AND date_ordered = '2007-01-02';
 store_key | order_number | date_ordered |     vendor_name
-----------+--------------+--------------+----------------------
        50 |        99234 | 2007-01-02   | Everything Wholesale
        81 |       200802 | 2007-01-02   | Everything Wholesale
       115 |        13793 | 2007-01-02   | Everything Wholesale
       204 |        41842 | 2007-01-02   | Everything Wholesale
       133 |       169025 | 2007-01-02   | Everything Wholesale
       163 |       208580 | 2007-01-02   | Everything Wholesale
        29 |       154972 | 2007-01-02   | Everything Wholesale
       145 |       236790 | 2007-01-02   | Everything Wholesale
       249 |        54838 | 2007-01-02   | Everything Wholesale
         7 |       161536 | 2007-01-02   | Everything Wholesale
(10 rows)

See also

IN

5 - IN

Checks whether a single value is found (or not found) within a set of values.

Checks whether a single value is found (or not found) within a set of values.

Syntax

(column-list) [ NOT ] IN ( values-list )

Arguments

column-list
One or more comma-delimited columns in the queried tables.
values-list
Comma-delimited list of constant values to find in the column-list columns. Each values-list value maps to a column-list column according to their order in values-list and column-list, respectively. Column/value pairs must have compatible data types.

You can specify multiple sets of values as follows:

( (values-list), (values-list)[,...] )

Null handling

Vertica supports multicolumn NOT IN subqueries where the columns are not marked NOT NULL. If one of the columns is found to contain a NULL value during query execution, Vertica returns a run-time error.

Similarly, IN subqueries nested within another expression are not supported if any column values are NULL. For example, if in the following statement column x from either table contains a NULL value, Vertica returns a run-time error:

=> SELECT * FROM t1 WHERE (x IN (SELECT x FROM t2)) IS FALSE;
   ERROR: NULL value found in a column used by a subquery

EXISTS versus IN

Whether you use EXISTS or IN subqueries depends on which predicates you select in outer and inner query blocks. For example, the following query gets a list of all the orders placed by all stores on January 2, 2007 for vendors with records in the vendor table:

=> SELECT store_key, order_number, date_ordered
   FROM store.store_orders_fact WHERE EXISTS
     (SELECT 1 FROM public.vendor_dimension vd JOIN store.store_orders_fact ord ON vd.vendor_key = ord.vendor_key)
   AND date_ordered = '2007-01-02';
 store_key | order_number | date_ordered
-----------+--------------+--------------
       114 |       271071 | 2007-01-02
        19 |       290888 | 2007-01-02
       132 |        58942 | 2007-01-02
       232 |         9286 | 2007-01-02
       126 |       224474 | 2007-01-02
       196 |        63482 | 2007-01-02
  ...
       196 |        83327 | 2007-01-02
       138 |       278373 | 2007-01-02
       179 |       293586 | 2007-01-02
       155 |       213413 | 2007-01-02
(506 rows)

The above query looks for existence of the vendor and date ordered. To return a particular value, rather than simple existence, the query looks for orders placed by the vendor who got the best deal on January 2, 2007:

=> SELECT store_key, order_number, date_ordered, vendor_name
   FROM store.store_orders_fact ord JOIN public.vendor_dimension vd ON ord.vendor_key = vd.vendor_key
   WHERE vd.deal_size IN (SELECT MAX(deal_size) FROM public.vendor_dimension) AND date_ordered = '2007-01-02';
 store_key | order_number | date_ordered |     vendor_name
-----------+--------------+--------------+----------------------
        50 |        99234 | 2007-01-02   | Everything Wholesale
        81 |       200802 | 2007-01-02   | Everything Wholesale
       115 |        13793 | 2007-01-02   | Everything Wholesale
       204 |        41842 | 2007-01-02   | Everything Wholesale
       133 |       169025 | 2007-01-02   | Everything Wholesale
       163 |       208580 | 2007-01-02   | Everything Wholesale
        29 |       154972 | 2007-01-02   | Everything Wholesale
       145 |       236790 | 2007-01-02   | Everything Wholesale
       249 |        54838 | 2007-01-02   | Everything Wholesale
         7 |       161536 | 2007-01-02   | Everything Wholesale
(10 rows)

Examples

The following SELECT statement queries all data in table t11.

=> SELECT * FROM t11 ORDER BY pk;
 pk | col1 | col2 | SKIP_ME_FLAG
----+------+------+--------------
  1 |    2 |    3 | t
  2 |    3 |    4 | t
  3 |    4 |    5 | f
  4 |    5 |    6 | f
  5 |    6 |    7 | t
  6 |      |    8 | f
  7 |    8 |      | t
(7 rows)

The following query specifies an IN predicate, to find all rows in t11 where columns col1 and col2 contain values of (2,3) or (6,7):

=> SELECT * FROM t11 WHERE (col1, col2) IN ((2,3), (6,7)) ORDER BY pk;
 pk | col1 | col2 | SKIP_ME_FLAG
----+------+------+--------------
  1 |    2 |    3 | t
  5 |    6 |    7 | t
(2 rows)

The following query uses the VMart schema to illustrate the use of outer expressions referring to different inner expressions:

=> SELECT product_description, product_price FROM product_dimension
   WHERE (product_dimension.product_key, product_dimension.product_key) IN
      (SELECT store.store_orders_fact.order_number,
         store.store_orders_fact.quantity_ordered
       FROM store.store_orders_fact);
     product_description     | product_price
-----------------------------+---------------
 Brand #73 wheechair         |           454
 Brand #72 box of candy      |           326
 Brand #71 vanilla ice cream |           270
(3 rows)

6 - INTERPOLATE

Joins two using some ordered attribute.

Joins two event series using some ordered attribute. Event series joins let you compare values from two series directly, rather than having to normalize the series to the same measurement interval.

An event series join is an extension of a regular outer join. The difference between expressing a regular outer join and an event series join is the INTERPOLATE predicate, which is used in the ON clause (see Examples below). Instead of padding the non-preserved side with null values when there is no match, the event series join pads the non-preserved side with the previous/next values from the table.

Interpolated values come from the table that contains the null, not from the other table.Vertica does not guarantee that the output contains no null values. If there is no previous/next value for a mismatched row, that row is padded with nulls.

Syntax

expression1 INTERPOLATE { PREVIOUS | NEXT } VALUE expression2

Arguments

expression1,expression2

A column reference from one of the tables specified in the FROM clause.

The columns can be of any data type. Because event series are time-based, the type is typically DATE/TIMEor TIMESTAMP.

{ PREVIOUS | NEXT } VALUE

Pads the non-preserved side with the previous/next values when there is no match. If previous is called on the first row (or next on the last row), will pad with null values.

Input rows are sorted in ascending logical order of the join column.

Notes

  • Data is logically partitioned on the table in which it resides, based on other ON clause equality predicates.

  • Event series join requires that the joined tables are both sorted on columns in equality predicates, in any order, followed by the INTERPOLATED column. If data is already sorted in this order, then an explicit sort is avoided, which can improve query performance. For example, given the following tables:

    ask: exchange, stock, ts, pricebid: exchange,
    stock, ts, price
    

    In the query that follows:

    • ask is sorted on exchange, stock (or the reverse), ts

    • bid is sorted on exchange, stock (or the reverse), ts

    SELECT ask.price - bid.price, ask.ts, ask.stock, ask.exchange
    FROM ask FULL OUTER JOIN bid
       ON ask.stock = bid.stock AND ask.exchange =
       bid.exchange AND ask.ts INTERPOLATE PREVIOUS
       VALUE bid.ts;
    

Restrictions

  • Only one INTERPOLATE expression is allowed per join.
  • INTERPOLATE expressions are used only with ANSI SQL-99 syntax (the ON clause), which is already true for full outer joins.
  • INTERPOLATE can be used with equality predicates only.
  • The AND operator is supported but not the OR and NOT operators.
  • Expressions and implicit or explicit casts are not supported, but subqueries are allowed.

Semantics

When you write an event series join in place of normal join, values are evaluated as follows (using the schema in the examples below):

  • t is the outer, preserved table.
  • t1 is the inner, non-preserved table.
  • For each row in outer table t, the ON clause predicates are evaluated for each combination of each row in the inner table t1.
  • If the ON clause predicates evaluate to true for any combination of rows, those combination rows are produced at the output.
  • If the ON clause is false for all combinations, a single output row is produced with the values of the row from t along with the columns of t1 chosen from the row in t1 with the greatest t1.y value such that t1.y < t.x; If no such row is found, pad with nulls.

In the case of a full outer join, all values from both tables are preserved.

Examples

The examples that follow use this simple schema.

CREATE TABLE t(x TIME);
CREATE TABLE t1(y TIME);
INSERT INTO t VALUES('12:40:23');
INSERT INTO t VALUES('13:40:25');
INSERT INTO t VALUES('13:45:00');
INSERT INTO t VALUES('14:49:55');
INSERT INTO t1 VALUES('12:40:23');
INSERT INTO t1 VALUES('14:00:00');
COMMIT;

Normal full outer join

=> SELECT * FROM t FULL OUTER JOIN t1 ON t.x = t1.y;

Notice the null rows from the non-preserved table:

    x     |    y
----------+----------
 12:40:23 | 12:40:23
 13:40:25 |
 13:45:00 |
 14:49:55 |
          | 14:00:00
(5 rows)

Full outer join with interpolation

=> SELECT * FROM t FULL OUTER JOIN t1 ON t.x INTERPOLATE PREVIOUS VALUE t1.y;

In this case, the rows with no entry point are padded with values from the previous row.

    x     |    y
----------+----------
 12:40:23 | 12:40:23
 13:40:25 | 12:40:23
 13:45:00 | 12:40:23
 14:49:55 | 12:40:23
 13:40:25 | 14:00:00
(5 rows)

Likewise, interpolate next is also supported:

=> SELECT * FROM t FULL OUTER JOIN t1 ON t.x INTERPOLATE NEXT VALUE t1.y;

In this case, the rows with no entry point are padded with values from the next row.

    x     |    y
----------+----------
 12:40:23 | 12:40:23
 13:40:25 | 14:00:00
 13:45:00 | 14:00:00
 14:49:55 |
 14:49:55 | 14:00:00
(5 rows)

Normal left outer join

=> SELECT * FROM t LEFT OUTER JOIN t1 ON t.x = t1.y;

Again, there are nulls in the non-preserved table

    x     |    y
----------+----------
 12:40:23 | 12:40:23
 13:40:25 |
 13:45:00 |
 14:49:55 |
(4 rows)

Left outer join with interpolation

=> SELECT * FROM t LEFT OUTER JOIN t1 ON t.x INTERPOLATE PREVIOUS VALUE t1.y;

Nulls have been padded with interpolated values.

    x     |    y
----------+----------
 12:40:23 | 12:40:23
 13:40:25 | 12:40:23
 13:45:00 | 12:40:23
 14:49:55 | 14:00:00
(4 rows)

Likewise, interpolate next is also supported:

=> SELECT * FROM t LEFT OUTER JOIN t1 ON t.x INTERPOLATE NEXT VALUE t1.y;

Nulls have been padded with interpolated values here as well.

    x     |    y
----------+----------
 12:40:23 | 12:40:23
 13:40:25 | 14:00:00
 13:45:00 | 14:00:00
 14:49:55 |
 (4 rows)

Inner joins

For inner joins, there is no difference between a regular inner join and an event series inner join. Since null values are eliminated from the result set, there is nothing to interpolate.

A regular inner join returns only the single matching row at 12:40:23:

=> SELECT * FROM t INNER JOIN t1 ON t.x = t1.y;
    x     |    y
----------+----------
 12:40:23 | 12:40:23
(1 row)

An event series inner join finds the same single-matching row at 12:40:23:

=> SELECT * FROM t INNER JOIN t1 ON t.x INTERPOLATE PREVIOUS VALUE t1.y;
    x     |    y
----------+----------
 12:40:23 | 12:40:23
(1 row)

See also

Event series joins

6.1 - Join predicate

Specifies the columns on which records from two or more tables are joined.

Specifies the columns on which records from two or more tables are joined. You can connect multiple join predicates with logical operators AND, OR, and NOT.

Syntax

ON column-ref = column-ref [ {AND | OR | NOT } column-ref = column-ref ]...

Parameters

column-ref Specifies a column in a queried table. For best performance, do not join on LONG VARBINARY and LONG VARCHAR columns.

See also

Joins

7 - LIKE

Retrieves rows where a string expression—typically a column—matches the specified pattern or, if qualified by ANY or ALL, set of patterns.

Retrieves rows where a string expression—typically a column—matches the specified pattern or, if qualified by ANY or ALL, set of patterns. Patterns can contain one or more wildcard characters.

If an ANY or ALL pattern is qualified with NOT, the negation is pushed down to each clause. NOT LIKE ANY (a, b) is equivalent to NOT LIKE a OR NOT LIKE b. See the examples.

Syntax

string-expression [ NOT ] { LIKE | ILIKE | LIKEB | ILIKEB }
   { pattern | { ANY | SOME | ALL } ( pattern,... ) } [ ESCAPE 'char' ]

Arguments

string-expression
String expression, typically a column, to test for instances of the specified pattern or patterns.
NOT
Returns true if the LIKE predicate returns false and vice-versa. When used with ANY or ALL, applies to each value individually.
LIKE | ILIKE | LIKEB | ILIKEB
Type of comparison:
  • LIKE: Complies with the SQL standard, case-sensitive, operates on UTF-8 character strings, exact behavior depends on collation parameters such as strength. LIKE is stable for character strings, but immutable for binary strings
  • ILIKE: Same as LIKE but case-insensitive.
  • LIKEB: Performs case-sensitive byte-at-a-time ASCII comparisons, immutable for character and binary strings.
  • ILIKEB: Same as LIKEB but case-insensitive.
pattern
A pattern to test against the expression. Pattern strings can contain the following wildcard characters:
  • _ (underscore): Match any single character.

  • % (percent): Match any string of zero or more characters.

ANY | SOME | ALL
Apply a comma-delimited list of patterns, where:
  • ANY and SOME return true if any pattern matches, equivalent to logical OR. These options are synonyms.

  • ALL returns true only if all patterns match, equivalent to logical AND.

ESCAPE char
Escape character, by default backslash (\), used to escape reserved characters: wildcard characters (underscore and percent), and the escape character itself.

This option is enforced only for non-default collations; it is currently unsupported with ANY/ALL pattern matching.

Substitute symbols

You can substitute the following symbols for LIKE and its variants:

Symbol Eqivalent to:
~~ LIKE
~# LIKEB
~~* ILIKE
~#* ILIKEB
!~~ NOT LIKE
!~# NOT LIKEB
!~~* NOT ILIKE
!~#* NOT ILIKEB

Pattern matching

LIKE and its variants require that the entire string expression match the specified patterns. To match a sequence of characters anywhere within a string, the pattern must start and end with a percent sign.

LIKE does not ignore trailing white space characters. If the data values to match end with an indeterminate amount of white space, append the wildcard character % to pattern.

Locale dependencies

In the default locale, LIKE and ILIKE handle UTF-8 character-at-a-time, locale-insensitive comparisons. ILIKE handles language-independent case-folding.

In non-default locales, LIKE and ILIKE perform locale-sensitive string comparisons, including some automatic normalization, using the same algorithm as the = operator on VARCHAR types.

ESCAPE expressions evaluate to exactly one octet—or one UTF-8 character for non-default locales.

Examples

Basic pattern matching

The following query searches for names with a common prefix:

=> SELECT name FROM people WHERE name LIKE 'Ann%';
   name
-----------
 Ann
 Ann Marie
 Anna
(3 rows)

LIKE ANY/ALL

LIKE operators support the keywords ANY and ALL, which let you specify multiple patterns to test against a string expression. For example, the following query finds all names that begin or end with the letter 'A':

=> SELECT name FROM people WHERE name LIKE ANY ('A%', '%a');
   name
-----------
 Alice
 Ann
 Ann Marie
 Anna
 Roberta
(5 rows)

LIKE ANY usage is equivalent to individual LIKE conditions combined with OR:

=> SELECT name FROM people WHERE name LIKE 'A%' OR name LIKE '%a';
   name
-----------
 Alice
 Ann
 Ann Marie
 Anna
 Roberta
(5 rows)

Similarly, LIKE ALL is equivalent to individual LIKE conditions combined with AND.

NOT LIKE ANY/ALL

You can use NOT with LIKE ANY or LIKE ALL. NOT does not negate the LIKE expression; instead it negates each clause.

Consider a table with the following contents:

=> SELECT name FROM people;
   name
-----------
 Alice
 Ann
 Ann Marie
 Anna
 Richard
 Rob
 Robert
 Roberta
(8 rows)

In the following query, NOT LIKE ANY ('A%', '%a') is equivalent to NOT LIKE 'A%' OR NOT LIKE '%a', so the only result that is eliminated is Anna, which matches both patterns:

=> SELECT name FROM people WHERE name NOT LIKE ANY ('A%', '%a');
   name
-----------
 Alice
 Ann
 Ann Marie
 Richard
 Rob
 Robert
 Roberta
(7 rows)

--- same results:
=> SELECT name FROM people WHERE name NOT LIKE 'A%' OR name NOT LIKE '%a';

NOT LIKE ALL eliminates results that satisfy any pattern:

=> SELECT name FROM people WHERE name NOT LIKE ALL ('A%', '%a');
  name
---------
 Richard
 Rob
 Robert
(3 rows)

--- same results:
=> SELECT name FROM people WHERE name NOT LIKE 'A%' AND name NOT LIKE '%a';

Pattern matching in locales

The following example illustrates pattern matching in locales.

=> \locale default
INFO 2567:  Canonical locale: 'en_US'
Standard collation: 'LEN_KBINARY'
English (United States)
=> CREATE TABLE src(c1 VARCHAR(100));
=> INSERT INTO src VALUES (U&'\00DF'); --The sharp s (ß)
=> INSERT INTO src VALUES ('ss');
=> COMMIT;

Querying the src table in the default locale returns both ss and sharp s.

=> SELECT * FROM src;
 c1
----
 ß
 ss
(2 rows)

The following query combines pattern-matching predicates to return the results from column c1:

=> SELECT c1, c1 = 'ss' AS equality, c1 LIKE 'ss'
   AS LIKE, c1 ILIKE 'ss' AS ILIKE FROM src;
 c1 | equality | LIKE | ILIKE
----+----------+------+-------
 ß  | f        | f    | f
 ss | t        | t    | t
(2 rows)

The next query specifies unicode format for c1:

=> SELECT c1, c1 = U&'\00DF' AS equality,
   c1 LIKE U&'\00DF' AS LIKE,
   c1 ILIKE U&'\00DF' AS ILIKE from src;
 c1 | equality | LIKE | ILIKE
----+----------+------+-------
 ß  | t        | t    | t
 ss | f        | f    | f
(2 rows)

Now change the locale to German with a strength of 1 (ignore case and accents):

=> \locale LDE_S1
INFO 2567:  Canonical locale: 'de'
Standard collation: 'LDE_S1'
German  Deutsch
=> SELECT c1, c1 = 'ss' AS equality,
c1 LIKE 'ss' as LIKE, c1 ILIKE 'ss' AS ILIKE from src;
 c1 | equality | LIKE | ILIKE
----+----------+------+-------
 ß  | t        | t    | t
 ss | t        | t    | t
(2 rows)

This example illustrates binary data types with pattern-matching predicates:

=> CREATE TABLE t (c BINARY(1));
CREATE TABLE
=> INSERT INTO t VALUES (HEX_TO_BINARY('0x00')), (HEX_TO_BINARY('0xFF'));
 OUTPUT
--------
      2
(1 row)

=> COMMIT;
COMMIT
=> SELECT TO_HEX(c) FROM t;
 TO_HEX
--------
 00
 ff
(2 rows)

=> SELECT * FROM t;
  c
------
 \000
 \377
(2 rows)

=> SELECT c, c = '\000', c LIKE '\000', c ILIKE '\000' from t;
  c   | ?column? | ?column? | ?column?
------+----------+----------+----------
 \000 | t        | t        | t
 \377 | f        | f        | f
(2 rows)

=> SELECT c, c = '\377', c LIKE '\377', c ILIKE '\377' FROM t;
  c   | ?column? | ?column? | ?column?
------+----------+----------+----------
 \000 | f        | f        | f
 \377 | t        | t        | t
(2 rows)

8 - NULL

Tests for null values.

Tests for null values. The expression can be a column name, literal, or function.

Syntax

value-expression IS [ NOT ] NULL

Examples

Column name:

=> SELECT date_key FROM date_dimension WHERE date_key IS NOT NULL;
 date_key
----------
        1
      366
     1462
     1097
        2
        3
        6
        7
        8
...

Function:

=> SELECT MAX(household_id) IS NULL FROM customer_dimension;
 ?column?
----------
 f
(1 row)

Literal:

=> SELECT 'a' IS NOT NULL;
 ?column?
----------
 t
(1 row)