Does EXCEPT execute faster than a JOIN when the table columns are the same
To find all the changes between two databases, I am left joining the tables on the pk and using a date_modified field to choose the latest record. Will using EXCEPT
increase performance since the tables have the same schema. I would like to rewrite it with an EXCEPT
, but I'm not sure if the implementation for EXCEPT
would out perform a JOIN
in every case. Hopefully someone has a more technical explanation for when to use EXCEPT
.
回答
There is no way anyone can tell you that EXCEPT
will always or never out-perform an equivalent OUTER JOIN
. The optimizer will choose an appropriate execution plan regardless of how you write your intent.
That said, here is my guideline:
Use EXCEPT
when at least one of the following is true:
- The query is more readable (this will almost always be true).
- Performance is improved.
And BOTH of the following are true:
- The query produces semantically identical results, and you can demonstrate this through sufficient regression testing, including all edge cases.
- Performance is not degraded (again, in all edge cases, as well as environmental changes such as clearing buffer pool, updating statistics, clearing plan cache, and restarting the service).
It is important to note that it can be a challenge to write an equivalent EXCEPT
query as the JOIN
becomes more complex and/or you are relying on duplicates in part of the columns but not others. Writing a NOT EXISTS
equivalent, while slightly less readable than EXCEPT
should be far more trivial to accomplish - and will often lead to a better plan (but note that I would never say ALWAYS
or NEVER
, except in the way I just did).