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Home/ Questions/Q 844073
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 15, 20262026-05-15T06:13:50+00:00 2026-05-15T06:13:50+00:00

I’ve written the same query as a subquery and a self-join. Is there any

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I’ve written the same query as a subquery and a self-join.

Is there any obvious argument for one over the other here?

SUBQUERY:

SELECT prod_id, prod_name
FROM products
WHERE vend_id = (SELECT vend_id
FROM products
WHERE prod_id = ‘DTNTR’);

SELF-JOIN:

SELECT p1.prod_id, p1.prod_name
FROM products p1, products p2
WHERE p1.vend_id = p2.vend_id
AND p2.prod_id = ‘DTNTR’;
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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-15T06:13:50+00:00Added an answer on May 15, 2026 at 6:13 am

    This post has some figures on execution times. The poster states:

    The first query shows 49.2% of the batch while the second shows 50.8%, leading
    one to think that the subquery is marginally faster.

    Now, I started up Profiler and ran both queries. The first query required
    over 92,000 reads to execute, but the one with the join required only 2300,
    leading me to believe that the inner join is significantly faster.

    There are conflicting responses though:

    My rule of thumb: only use JOIN’s if you need to output a column from the
    table you are join’ing to; otherwise, use sub-queries.

    and this:

    Joining should always be faster – theoretically and realistically. Subqueries
    – particularly correlated – can be very difficult to optimise. If you think
    about it you will see why – technically, the subquery could be executed once
    for each row of the outer query – blech!

    I also agree with Madhivanan, if the sub query returns anything but one value your main query will fail, so use IN instead.

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