In MySQL, you cannot do this:
create table t (i int primary key, j int);
insert into t values (1, 1);
update t
set j = (select max(j) from t) + 1;
The UPDATE
statement will raise an error as follows:
SQL Error [1093] [HY000]: You can’t specify target table ‘t’ for update in FROM clause
People have considered this to be a bug in MySQL for ages, as most other RDBMS can do this without any issues, including MySQL clones:
- MariaDB 10.2
- SingleStore 6 (previously known as MemSQL)
Luckily, jOOQ can easily transform such queries for you, whenever you’re trying to UPDATE
or DELETE
a target table, with a predicate that depends on the target table itself. In those cases, jOOQ will just apply the following workaround:
update t
set j = (
select *
from (
select max(j) from t
) t
) + 1;
Now, the query works without any syntactic issues. Similar workarounds are documented in the MySQL docs, but with jOOQ, you simply don’t have to think about this limitation.