Greg Bailey writes:
> >Description:
> 
> Joining multiple tables together in a select statement with where clauses
> using the "IN (...)" construct generate duplicated output rows.

Hi!

I tested your case with 4.0.2 and got identical results from both
queries. 

This was some bug probably fixed long time ago.

-- 
Regards,
   __  ___     ___ ____  __
  /  |/  /_ __/ __/ __ \/ /    Mr. Sinisa Milivojevic <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
 / /|_/ / // /\ \/ /_/ / /__   MySQL AB, Fulltime Developer
/_/  /_/\_, /___/\___\_\___/   Larnaca, Cyprus
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