Question

In Postgres, ANY and SOME are synonyms when used on the right hand side of a predicate expression. For example, these are the same:

column = ANY (SELECT ...)
column = SOME (SELECT ...)

This is documented here:

http://www.postgresql.org/docs/9.1/static/functions-subquery.html#FUNCTIONS-SUBQUERY-ANY-SOME

I have observed ANY and SOME to be supported by at least these SQL DBMSs:

  • DB2
  • Derby
  • H2
  • HSQLDB
  • Ingres
  • MySQL
  • Oracle
  • Postgres
  • SQL Server
  • Sybase ASE
  • Sybase SQL Anywhere

Can I safely assume that all of those dialects (and others, too) treat ANY and SOME as synonyms or is there a subtle difference between the two keywords in any/some DBMS?

I have found this in the SQL92 definition:

<quantifier> ::= <all> | <some>
<all> ::= ALL
<some> ::= SOME | ANY

This doesn't say anything about the semantics of ANY and SOME. Later on in the document, only <some> is referenced, not the two keywords. I'm suspecting that there might be a subtle difference in NULL handling, for instance, at least in some DBMSs. Any/some pointer to a clear statement whether this can be assumed or not is welcome.

Was it helpful?

Solution

Few lines after what you're quoting, the SQL92 standard also specifies the semantics for <some>, namely:

c) If the implied <comparison predicate> is true for at least
one row RT in T, then "R <comp op> <some> T" is true.

d) If T is empty or if the implied <comparison predicate> is
false for every row RT in T, then "R <comp op> <some> T" is
false.

e) If "R <comp op> <quantifier> T" is neither true nor false,
then it is unknown.

These rules apply for the <some> token, independent on whether it is the SOME or ANY alternative, so yes, they are synonyms according to the standard

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