Well indexing (or lack thereof) could be the real problem but you could try "chaining" the tables

select * from sale s, taxes t, property p, buyer b
where s.id = t.id and t.id = p.id and p.id = b.id

and see if that (or other combination) changes the query plan appreciably.


(I would have to wonder if all those records are really unique per sale.id? e.g. multiple buyers per unit sold or school and property tax in separate records. And wondering further why, if you have sql access, do you need a single table. Maybe you want a view for convenience (e.g. select * from view_of_sales where lower(county) like 'a%' )?

tripplowe wrote:
Hey Folks,

I have a query that seems like it will never end.  I'm hoping you can help
me rewrite it.

I have 4 tables that contain information about house sales within the state
(sale, taxes, property, buyer).  Each table has an 'id' field that links
each record.  I am just trying to flatten these files so I will have all of
the information in a single file.  Below is my attempt to do so.  Is there a
more efficient way to rewrite the joins?

select * from sale, taxes, property, buyer where sale.id = taxes.id and sale.id = property.id and sale.id = buyer.id

I'm using postgresql 8.3 on a Windows 7 machine.
Thank You,
-Tripp

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