On 02/09/11, David Johnston (polobo@xxxxxxxxx) wrote: > > In my "-1" example, am I right in assuming that I created a correlated > > subquery rather than an correlated one? I'm confused about the > > difference. > > > Correlated: has a where clause that references the outer query > Un-correlated: not correlated > > Because of the where clause a correlated sub-query will return a > different record for each row whereas an un-correlated sub-query will > return the same record for all rows since the where clause (if any) is > constant. Hi David -- thanks for the clarification. However I'm still a little confused. As I understand it the following is a un-correlated sub-query: UPDATE slots SET a = 'a' ,b = (SELECT uuid_generate_v1()) WHERE c = TRUE; and the following, without a 'WHERE', is a correlated sub-query: UPDATE slots SET a = 'a' ,b = uuid_generate_v1() WHERE c = TRUE; Is the point that the lower is not a sub-query at all? Regards Rory -- Sent via pgsql-general mailing list (pgsql-general@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx) To make changes to your subscription: http://www.postgresql.org/mailpref/pgsql-general