SQL Subqueries (Microsoft Access SQL)
Access Developer Reference |
A subquery is a SELECT statement nested inside a SELECT, SELECT…INTO, INSERT…INTO, DELETE, or UPDATE statement or inside another subquery.
Syntax
You can use three forms of syntax to create a subquery:
comparison [ANY | ALL | SOME] (sqlstatement)
expression [NOT] IN (sqlstatement)
[NOT] EXISTS (sqlstatement)
A subquery has these parts:
Part | Description |
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comparison | An expression and a comparison operator that compares the expression with the results of the subquery. |
expression | An expression for which the result set of the subquery is searched. |
sqlstatement | A SELECT statement, following the same format and rules as any other SELECT statement. It must be enclosed in parentheses. |
Remarks
You can use a subquery instead of an expression in the field list of a SELECT statement or in a WHERE or HAVING clause. In a subquery, you use a SELECT statement to provide a set of one or more specific values to evaluate in the WHERE or HAVING clause expression.
Use the ANY or SOME predicate, which are synonymous, to retrieve records in the main query that satisfy the comparison with any records retrieved in the subquery. The following example returns all products whose unit price is greater than that of any product sold at a discount of 25 percent or more:
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Use the ALL predicate to retrieve only those records in the main query that satisfy the comparison with all records retrieved in the subquery. If you changed ANY to ALL in the previous example, the query would return only those products whose unit price is greater than that of all products sold at a discount of 25 percent or more. This is much more restrictive.
Use the IN predicate to retrieve only those records in the main query for which some record in the subquery contains an equal value. The following example returns all products with a discount of 25 percent or more:
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Conversely, you can use NOT IN to retrieve only those records in the main query for which no record in the subquery contains an equal value.
Use the EXISTS predicate (with the optional NOT reserved word) in true/false comparisons to determine whether the subquery returns any records.
You can also use table name aliases in a subquery to refer to tables listed in a FROM clause outside the subquery. The following example returns the names of employees whose salaries are equal to or greater than the average salary of all employees having the same job title. The Employees table is given the alias "T1":
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In the preceding example, the AS reserved word is optional.
Some subqueries are allowed in crosstab queries— specifically, as predicates (those in the WHERE clause). Subqueries as output (those in the SELECT list) are not allowed in crosstab queries.
Example
This example lists the name and contact of every customer who placed an order in the second quarter of 1995.
This example calls the EnumFields procedure, which you can find in the SELECT statement example.
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See Also
ALL, DISTINCT, DISTINCTROW, TOP Predicates (Microsoft Access SQL)
DELETE Statement (Microsoft Access SQL)
HAVING Clause (Microsoft Access SQL)
INNER JOIN Operation (Microsoft Access SQL)
INSERT INTO Statement (Microsoft Access SQL)
LEFT JOIN, RIGHT JOIN Operations (Microsoft Access SQL)
SELECT INTO Statement (Microsoft Access SQL)
SELECT Statement (Microsoft Access SQL)
UNION Operation (Microsoft Access SQL)