You can use this query

SELECT * FROM T
        WHERE run = 'a' AND wafer = 1 AND test = 'foo'
UNION
SELECT * FROM T
        WHERE run = 'a' AND wafer = 2 AND test = 'foo'
UNION
SELECT * FROM T
        WHERE run = 'a' AND wafer = 3 AND test = 'foo'
UNION
SELECT * FROM T
        WHERE run = 'a' AND wafer = 3 AND test = 'bar'



On Wed, 2002-08-28 at 16:12, george young wrote:
> [postgreql 7.2, linux]
> I have a table T with columns run, wafer, and test:
>    T(run text, wafer int, test text)
> Given a run and a set of wafers, I need the set of tests that match
> *all* the specified wafers:
> 
> run   wafer   test
> a     1       foo
> a     2       foo
> a     3       foo
> a     3       bar
> 
> E.g.
>   Given run 'a' and wafers (1,3) I should get one row: foo, since only foo matches 
>both 1 and 3.
>   Given run 'a' and wafers (3) I should get two rows: foo,bar, since both foo and 
>bar match 3.
> 
> Is there some neat way to do this in a single query?
> 
> Puzzled,
>       George
> 
> 
> -- 
>  I cannot think why the whole bed of the ocean is
>  not one solid mass of oysters, so prolific they seem. Ah,
>  I am wandering! Strange how the brain controls the brain!
>       -- Sherlock Holmes in "The Dying Detective"
> 
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> 
-- 
Wei Weng
Network Software Engineer
KenCast Inc.



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