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Asked: May 10, 20262026-05-10T15:13:40+00:00 2026-05-10T15:13:40+00:00

The N+1 selects problem is generally stated as a problem in Object-Relational mapping (ORM)

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The ‘N+1 selects problem’ is generally stated as a problem in Object-Relational mapping (ORM) discussions, and I understand that it has something to do with having to make a lot of database queries for something that seems simple in the object world.

Does anybody have a more detailed explanation of the problem?

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  1. 2026-05-10T15:13:41+00:00Added an answer on May 10, 2026 at 3:13 pm

    Let’s say you have a collection of Car objects (database rows), and each Car has a collection of Wheel objects (also rows). In other words, Car → Wheel is a 1-to-many relationship.

    Now, let’s say you need to iterate through all the cars, and for each one, print out a list of the wheels. The naive O/R implementation would do the following:

    SELECT * FROM Cars; 

    And then for each Car:

    SELECT * FROM Wheel WHERE CarId = ? 

    In other words, you have one select for the Cars, and then N additional selects, where N is the total number of cars.

    Alternatively, one could get all wheels and perform the lookups in memory:

    SELECT * FROM Wheel; 

    This reduces the number of round-trips to the database from N+1 to 2. Most ORM tools give you several ways to prevent N+1 selects.

    Reference: Java Persistence with Hibernate, chapter 13.

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