If a subquery returns any values at all, then EXISTS
<subquery> is TRUE, and
NOT EXISTS <subquery> is
FALSE. For example:
SELECT column1 FROM t1 WHERE EXISTS (SELECT * FROM t2);
Traditionally an EXISTS subquery starts
with SELECT * but it could begin with
SELECT 5 or SELECT
column1 or anything at all -- MySQL ignores the
SELECT list in such a subquery, so it
doesn't matter.
For the above example, if t2 contains any
rows, even rows with nothing but NULL
values, then the EXISTS condition is
TRUE. This is actually an unlikely example,
since almost always a [NOT] EXISTS subquery
will contain correlations. Here are some more realistic
examples.
Example: What kind of store is present in one or more cities?
SELECT DISTINCT store_type FROM Stores
WHERE EXISTS (SELECT * FROM Cities_Stores
WHERE Cities_Stores.store_type = Stores.store_type);
Example: What kind of store is present in no cities?
SELECT DISTINCT store_type FROM Stores
WHERE NOT EXISTS (SELECT * FROM Cities_Stores
WHERE Cities_Stores.store_type = Stores.store_type);
Example: What kind of store is present in all cities?
SELECT DISTINCT store_type FROM Stores S1
WHERE NOT EXISTS (
SELECT * FROM Cities WHERE NOT EXISTS (
SELECT * FROM Cities_Stores
WHERE Cities_Stores.city = Cities.city
AND Cities_Stores.store_type = Stores.store_type));
The last example is a double-nested NOT
EXISTS query -- it has a NOT
EXISTS clause within a NOT EXISTS
clause. Formally, it answers the question ``does a city exist
with a store which is not in Stores?''. But it's easier to say
that a nested NOT EXISTS answers the
question ``is x TRUE for all y?''.
This is a translation of the MySQL Reference Manual that can be found at dev.mysql.com. The original Reference Manual is in English, and this translation is not necessarily as up to date as the English version.
