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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 27, 20262026-05-27T01:51:07+00:00 2026-05-27T01:51:07+00:00

I have a table like this (basic example, not the real thing): FKEY |

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I have a table like this (basic example, not the real thing):

FKEY  | NAME  | ATTRIBUTE_X
--------------------------
 1      '...'    42
 1      '...'    42
 1      '...'    42
 2      '...'    7
 2      '...'    7
 5      '...'    42
 5      '...'    42
 5      '...'    42
 5      '...'    42
 6      '...'    300
 6      '...'    300
 ....

Where – normally – each of the attribute_x values for a given fkey are all the same. (In my real data, I calculate attribute_x from some columns in the table and this property needs to be the same for all rows with the same fkey.

Now I have some rows where this property does not hold. I want to search the whole table to find all FKEYs with mismatched attribute_x values.

Example:

--------------------------
 145678973      '...'    23
 145678973      '...'    22 // Error, should also be 23
 145678973      '...'    23

My naive approach was:

SELECT distinct(TX1.FKEY)
FROM TABLEX TX1, TABLEX TX2
WHERE TX1.FKEY=TX2.FKEY
  AND TX1.ATTRIBUTE_X <> TX2.ATTRIBUTE_X
;

But with my real data this doesn’t complete (I ran of of temp tablespace and after the DBA increased the temp tablespace to 20 GIG the query ran for a few hours and then bailed out.)

Generally, is there a more efficient query for this?


I have a solution with PL/SQL where I just loop over the table sorted by FKEY, and if I find a different attribute_x vs. the last fetched record where the fkey stayed the same, I have found an erroneous fkey.

But this seems oh so primitve 🙂 Is there an efficient pure SQL solution?

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-27T01:51:07+00:00Added an answer on May 27, 2026 at 1:51 am

    Simplest way:

    select fkey
    from tablex
    group by fkey
    having count(distinct attribute_x) > 1
    
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