Logo Questions Linux Laravel Mysql Ubuntu Git Menu
 

MySQL query / clause execution order

What is the predefined order in which the clauses are executed in MySQL? Is some of it decided at run time, and is this order correct?

  • FROM clause
  • WHERE clause
  • GROUP BY clause
  • HAVING clause
  • SELECT clause
  • ORDER BY clause
like image 227
ericsicons Avatar asked Jun 09 '14 19:06

ericsicons


People also ask

What order does mysql execute queries?

The SQL query execution order is the order of clauses to execute while sorting our data. We execute From/Join clause first to join our tables and can also create some temporary tables.

What is the correct order of SQL query execution?

Six Operations to Order: SELECT, FROM, WHERE, GROUP BY, HAVING, and ORDER BY. By using examples, we will explain the execution order of the six most common operations or pieces in an SQL query. Because the database executes query components in a specific order, it's helpful for the developer to know this order.

Which clause is executed first in SQL?

The FROM clause, and subsequent JOIN s are first executed to determine the total working set of data that is being queried.

Is order executed before SELECT?

ORDER BY is evaluated before the SELECT, as the ordering changes the results returned.


2 Answers

This is how you can get the rough idea about how mysql executes the select query

DROP TABLE if exists new_table;  CREATE TABLE `new_table` ( `id` int(11) NOT NULL AUTO_INCREMENT, `testdecimal` decimal(6,2) DEFAULT NULL, PRIMARY KEY (`id`));  INSERT INTO `new_table` (`testdecimal`) VALUES ('1234.45'); INSERT INTO `new_table` (`testdecimal`) VALUES ('1234.45');  set @mysqlorder := '';  select @mysqlorder := CONCAT(@mysqlorder," SELECT ") from new_table,(select @mysqlorder := CONCAT(@mysqlorder," FROM ")) tt JOIN (select @mysqlorder := CONCAT(@mysqlorder," JOIN1 ")) t on ((select @mysqlorder := CONCAT(@mysqlorder," ON1 ")) or rand() < 1) JOIN (select @mysqlorder := CONCAT(@mysqlorder," JOIN2 ")) t2 on ((select @mysqlorder := CONCAT(@mysqlorder," ON2 ")) or rand() < 1) where ((select @mysqlorder := CONCAT(@mysqlorder," WHERE ")) or IF(new_table.testdecimal = 1234.45,true,false)) group by (select @mysqlorder := CONCAT(@mysqlorder," GROUPBY ")),id having (select @mysqlorder := CONCAT(@mysqlorder," HAVING ")) order by (select @mysqlorder := CONCAT(@mysqlorder," ORDERBY "));  select @mysqlorder; 

And here is the output from above mysql query, hope you can figure out the mysql execution of a SELECT query :-

FROM JOIN1 JOIN2 WHERE ON2 ON1 ORDERBY GROUPBY SELECT WHERE ON2 ON1 ORDERBY GROUPBY SELECT HAVING HAVING

like image 29
Pradeep Kumar Tiwari Avatar answered Sep 24 '22 04:09

Pradeep Kumar Tiwari


The actual execution of MySQL statements is a bit tricky. However, the standard does specify the order of interpretation of elements in the query. This is basically in the order that you specify, although I think HAVING and GROUP BY could come after SELECT:

  • FROM clause
  • WHERE clause
  • SELECT clause
  • GROUP BY clause
  • HAVING clause
  • ORDER BY clause

This is important for understanding how queries are parsed. You cannot use a column alias defined in a SELECT in the WHERE clause, for instance, because the WHERE is parsed before the SELECT. On the other hand, such an alias can be in the ORDER BY clause.

As for actual execution, that is really left up to the optimizer. For instance:

. . . GROUP BY a, b, c ORDER BY NULL 

and

. . . GROUP BY a, b, c ORDER BY a, b, c 

both have the effect of the ORDER BY not being executed at all -- and so not executed after the GROUP BY (in the first case, the effect is to remove sorting from the GROUP BY and in the second the effect is to do nothing more than the GROUP BY already does).

like image 65
Gordon Linoff Avatar answered Sep 24 '22 04:09

Gordon Linoff