The most common use of a subquery is in the form:
non_subquery_operand
comparison_operator
(subquery
)
Where comparison_operator
is one of
these operators:
= > < >= <= <> != <=>
For example:
... WHERE 'a' = (SELECT column1 FROM t1)
MySQL also permits this construct:
non_subquery_operand
LIKE (subquery
)
At one time the only legal place for a subquery was on the right side of a comparison, and you might still find some old DBMSs that insist on this.
Here is an example of a common-form subquery comparison that you
cannot do with a join. It finds all the rows in table
t1
for which the column1
value is equal to a maximum value in table
t2
:
SELECT * FROM t1 WHERE column1 = (SELECT MAX(column2) FROM t2);
Here is another example, which again is impossible with a join
because it involves aggregating for one of the tables. It finds
all rows in table t1
containing a value that
occurs twice in a given column:
SELECT * FROM t1 AS t WHERE 2 = (SELECT COUNT(*) FROM t1 WHERE t1.id = t.id);
For a comparison of the subquery to a scalar, the subquery must return a scalar. For a comparison of the subquery to a row constructor, the subquery must be a row subquery that returns a row with the same number of values as the row constructor. See Section 12.2.10.5, “Row Subqueries”.