What IN does
Filter rows where a value matches one of several options. SQL syntax can vary by database, but the pattern below is a useful starting point for reports and analysis.
Syntax or pattern
SELECT * FROM table_name WHERE column_name IN (value1, value2);5 practical examples
Use IN in a sales report
Apply the IN pattern to a sales table.
-- IN example for sales
SELECT customer_id, order_date, total_amount
FROM orders
WHERE total_amount > 100;This shows how the IN pattern can support a simple sales analysis.
Use IN for customers
Apply the IN pattern to customer records.
-- IN example for customers
SELECT customer_id, email, status
FROM customers
WHERE status = 'Active';This is useful when customer records need filtering, labeling or summarizing.
Use IN for products
Apply the IN pattern to product or inventory data.
-- IN example for products
SELECT product_id, product_name, category
FROM products;Product tables are good practice data for this SQL pattern.
Use IN for monthly reporting
Apply the IN pattern to a monthly reporting query.
-- IN example for monthly reporting
SELECT DATE_TRUNC('month', order_date) AS month, SUM(total_amount) AS sales
FROM orders
GROUP BY DATE_TRUNC('month', order_date);This turns row-level transactions into a report-friendly result.
Use IN during data checks
Apply the IN pattern to find data quality issues.
-- IN example for data checks
SELECT customer_id, COUNT(*) AS records
FROM orders
GROUP BY customer_id
HAVING COUNT(*) > 1;This is a useful pattern for auditing data before building a report.
Common mistakes to avoid
- Forgetting that SQL dialects vary across PostgreSQL, SQL Server, MySQL, BigQuery and SQLite.
- Using SELECT * in production reports when only a few columns are needed.
- Not checking join keys, duplicate rows or NULL values before trusting results.
FAQ
Will this SQL work in every database?
The idea is portable, but function names and date syntax may vary. Check your database dialect if a function is not recognized.
Should I use this in a report query?
Yes, if the pattern matches the business question and you have checked filters, joins and row counts.
Why does my result have too many rows?
The most common reasons are duplicate join keys, missing filters or grouping at the wrong level of detail.
Here are some ideas for you
Optional resources that may help if you are learning SQL, building reports, writing queries or improving your data workflow.
- SQL books for beginnersSee ideas
Practice query patterns with structured examples and exercises.
- Database design booksSee ideas
Understand tables, keys, relationships and why joins behave the way they do.
- Mechanical keyboardsSee ideas
Useful if you write queries, code and documentation for long work sessions.
- External monitorsSee ideas
View query editor, result grid and documentation side by side.
- Developer notebooksSee ideas
Sketch table relationships, query logic and report ideas before coding.
- Desk lampsSee ideas
Keep your workspace comfortable while studying or debugging queries.
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