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217 lines
6.0 KiB
Plaintext
217 lines
6.0 KiB
Plaintext
# 2013-04-13
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#
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# The author disclaims copyright to this source code. In place of
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# a legal notice, here is a blessing:
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#
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# May you do good and not evil.
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# May you find forgiveness for yourself and forgive others.
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# May you share freely, never taking more than you give.
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#
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#***********************************************************************
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#
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# This file tests features of the name resolver (the component that
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# figures out what identifiers in the SQL statement refer to) that
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# were fixed by ticket [2500cdb9be].
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#
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# See also tickets [1c69be2daf] and [f617ea3125] from 2013-08-14.
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#
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# Also a fuzzer-discovered problem on 2015-04-23.
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#
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set testdir [file dirname $argv0]
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source $testdir/tester.tcl
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# "ORDER BY y" binds to the output result-set column named "y"
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# if available. If no output column is named "y", then try to
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# bind against an input column named "y".
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#
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# This is classical SQL92 behavior.
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#
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do_test resolver01-1.1 {
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catchsql {
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CREATE TABLE t1(x, y); INSERT INTO t1 VALUES(11,22);
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CREATE TABLE t2(y, z); INSERT INTO t2 VALUES(33,44);
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SELECT 1 AS y FROM t1, t2 ORDER BY y;
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}
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} {0 1}
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do_test resolver01-1.2 {
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catchsql {
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SELECT 1 AS yy FROM t1, t2 ORDER BY y;
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}
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} {1 {ambiguous column name: y}}
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do_test resolver01-1.3 {
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catchsql {
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CREATE TABLE t3(x,y); INSERT INTO t3 VALUES(11,44),(33,22);
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SELECT x AS y FROM t3 ORDER BY y;
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}
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} {0 {11 33}}
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do_test resolver01-1.4 {
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catchsql {
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SELECT x AS yy FROM t3 ORDER BY y;
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}
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} {0 {33 11}}
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# SQLite allows the WHERE clause to reference output columns if there is
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# no other way to resolve the name.
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#
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do_test resolver01-1.5 {
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catchsql {
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SELECT x AS yy FROM t3 ORDER BY yy;
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}
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} {0 {11 33}}
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do_test resolver01-1.6 {
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catchsql {
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SELECT x AS yy FROM t3 ORDER BY 1;
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}
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} {0 {11 33}}
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# The "ORDER BY y COLLATE nocase" form works the same as "ORDER BY y".
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# The "y" binds more tightly to output columns than to input columns.
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#
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# This is for compatibility with SQL92 and with historical SQLite behavior.
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# Note that PostgreSQL considers "y COLLATE nocase" to be an expression
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# and thus PostgreSQL treats this case as if it where the 3.x case below.
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#
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do_test resolver01-2.1 {
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catchsql {
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SELECT 2 AS y FROM t1, t2 ORDER BY y COLLATE nocase;
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}
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} {0 2}
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do_test resolver01-2.2 {
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catchsql {
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SELECT 2 AS yy FROM t1, t2 ORDER BY y COLLATE nocase;
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}
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} {1 {ambiguous column name: y}}
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do_test resolver01-2.3 {
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catchsql {
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SELECT x AS y FROM t3 ORDER BY y COLLATE nocase;
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}
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} {0 {11 33}}
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do_test resolver01-2.4 {
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catchsql {
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SELECT x AS yy FROM t3 ORDER BY y COLLATE nocase;
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}
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} {0 {33 11}}
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do_test resolver01-2.5 {
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catchsql {
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SELECT x AS yy FROM t3 ORDER BY yy COLLATE nocase;
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}
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} {0 {11 33}}
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do_test resolver01-2.6 {
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catchsql {
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SELECT x AS yy FROM t3 ORDER BY 1 COLLATE nocase;
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}
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} {0 {11 33}}
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# But if the form is "ORDER BY expr" then bind more tightly to the
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# the input column names and only use the output column names if no
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# input column name matches.
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#
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# This is SQL99 behavior, as implemented by PostgreSQL and MS-SQL.
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# Note that Oracle works differently.
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#
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do_test resolver01-3.1 {
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catchsql {
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SELECT 3 AS y FROM t1, t2 ORDER BY +y;
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}
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} {1 {ambiguous column name: y}}
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do_test resolver01-3.2 {
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catchsql {
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SELECT 2 AS yy FROM t1, t2 ORDER BY +y;
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}
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} {1 {ambiguous column name: y}}
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do_test resolver01-3.3 {
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catchsql {
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SELECT x AS y FROM t3 ORDER BY +y;
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}
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} {0 {33 11}}
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do_test resolver01-3.4 {
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catchsql {
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SELECT x AS yy FROM t3 ORDER BY +y;
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}
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} {0 {33 11}}
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do_test resolver01-3.5 {
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catchsql {
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SELECT x AS yy FROM t3 ORDER BY +yy
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}
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} {0 {11 33}}
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# This is the test case given in ticket [f617ea3125e9] (with table name
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# changed from "t1" to "t4". The behavior of (1) and (3) match with
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# PostgreSQL, but we intentionally break with PostgreSQL to provide
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# SQL92 behavior for case (2).
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#
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do_execsql_test resolver01-4.1 {
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CREATE TABLE t4(m CHAR(2));
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INSERT INTO t4 VALUES('az');
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INSERT INTO t4 VALUES('by');
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INSERT INTO t4 VALUES('cx');
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SELECT '1', substr(m,2) AS m FROM t4 ORDER BY m;
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SELECT '2', substr(m,2) AS m FROM t4 ORDER BY m COLLATE binary;
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SELECT '3', substr(m,2) AS m FROM t4 ORDER BY lower(m);
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} {1 x 1 y 1 z 2 x 2 y 2 z 3 z 3 y 3 x}
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##########################################################################
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# Test cases for ticket [1c69be2dafc28]: Make sure the GROUP BY binds
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# more tightly to the input tables in all cases.
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#
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# This first case case has been wrong in SQLite for time out of mind.
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# For SQLite version 3.7.17 the answer was two rows, which is wrong.
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#
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do_execsql_test resolver01-5.1 {
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CREATE TABLE t5(m CHAR(2));
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INSERT INTO t5 VALUES('ax');
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INSERT INTO t5 VALUES('bx');
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INSERT INTO t5 VALUES('cy');
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SELECT count(*), substr(m,2,1) AS m FROM t5 GROUP BY m ORDER BY 1, 2;
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} {1 x 1 x 1 y}
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# This case is unambiguous and has always been correct.
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#
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do_execsql_test resolver01-5.2 {
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SELECT count(*), substr(m,2,1) AS mx FROM t5 GROUP BY m ORDER BY 1, 2;
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} {1 x 1 x 1 y}
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# This case is not allowed in standard SQL, but SQLite allows and does
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# the sensible thing.
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#
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do_execsql_test resolver01-5.3 {
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SELECT count(*), substr(m,2,1) AS mx FROM t5 GROUP BY mx ORDER BY 1, 2;
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} {1 y 2 x}
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do_execsql_test resolver01-5.4 {
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SELECT count(*), substr(m,2,1) AS mx FROM t5
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GROUP BY substr(m,2,1) ORDER BY 1, 2;
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} {1 y 2 x}
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# These test case weere provided in the 2013-08-14 email from Rob Golsteijn
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# that originally reported the problem of ticket [1c69be2dafc28].
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#
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do_execsql_test resolver01-6.1 {
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CREATE TABLE t61(name);
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SELECT min(name) FROM t61 GROUP BY lower(name);
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} {}
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do_execsql_test resolver01-6.2 {
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SELECT min(name) AS name FROM t61 GROUP BY lower(name);
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} {}
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do_execsql_test resolver01-6.3 {
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CREATE TABLE t63(name);
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INSERT INTO t63 VALUES (NULL);
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INSERT INTO t63 VALUES ('abc');
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SELECT count(),
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NULLIF(name,'abc') AS name
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FROM t63
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GROUP BY lower(name);
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} {1 {} 1 {}}
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do_execsql_test resolver01-7.1 {
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SELECT 2 AS x WHERE (SELECT x AS y WHERE 3>y);
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} {2}
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do_execsql_test resolver01-7.2 {
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SELECT 2 AS x WHERE (SELECT x AS y WHERE 1>y);
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} {}
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finish_test
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