• <转>SQL Server CROSS APPLY and OUTER APPLY


    Problem

    SQL Server 2005 introduced the APPLY operator, which is like a join clause and it allows joining between two table expressions i.e. joining a left/outer table expression with a right/inner table expression. The difference between the join and APPLY operator becomes evident when you have a table-valued expression on the right side and you want this table-valued expression to be evaluated for each row from the left table expression. In this tip I am going to demonstrate the APPLY operator, how it differs fromregular JOINs and some uses.

    Solution

    The APPLY operator allows you to join two table expressions; the right table expression is processed every time for each row from the left table expression. As you might have guessed, the left table expression is evaluated first and then the right table expression is evaluated against each row of the left table expression for the final result set. The final result set contains all the selected columns from the left table expression followed by all the columns of the right table expression.

    SQL Server APPLY operator has two variants; CROSS APPLY and OUTER APPLY

    • The CROSS APPLY operator returns only those rows from the left table expression (in its final output) if it matches with the right table expression. In other words, the right table expression returns rows for the left table expression match only.
    • The OUTER APPLY operator returns all the rows from the left table expression irrespective of its match with the right table expression. For those rows for which there are no corresponding matches in the right table expression, it contains NULL values in columns of the right table expression.
    • So you might conclude, the CROSS APPLY is equivalent to an INNER JOIN (or to be more precise its like a CROSS JOIN with a correlated sub-query) with an implicit join condition of 1=1 whereas the OUTER APPLY is equivalent to a LEFT OUTER JOIN.

    You might be wondering if the same can be achieved with a regular JOIN clause, so why and when do you use the APPLY operator? Although the same can be achieved with a normal JOIN, the need of APPLY arises if you have a table-valued expression on the right part and in some cases the use of the APPLY operator boosts performance of your query. Let me explain with some examples.

    Create Sample Data for CROSS APPLY and OUTER APPLY examples

    Script #1 creates a Department table to hold information about departments. Then it creates an Employee table which holds information about the employees. Please note, each employee belongs to a department, hence the Employee table has referential integrity with the Department table.

    --Script #1 - Creating some temporary objects to work on...
    
    USE [tempdb] 
    GO
     
    IF EXISTS (SELECT * FROM sys.objects WHERE OBJECT_ID = OBJECT_ID(N'[Employee]') AND type IN (N'U')) 
    BEGIN 
       DROP TABLE [Employee] 
    END 
    GO 
    
    IF EXISTS (SELECT * FROM sys.objects WHERE OBJECT_ID = OBJECT_ID(N'[Department]') AND type IN (N'U')) 
    BEGIN 
       DROP TABLE [Department] 
    END 
    
    CREATE TABLE [Department]( 
       [DepartmentID] [int] NOT NULL PRIMARY KEY, 
       [Name] VARCHAR(250) NOT NULL, 
    ) ON [PRIMARY] 
    
    INSERT [Department] ([DepartmentID], [Name])  
    VALUES (1, N'Engineering') 
    INSERT [Department] ([DepartmentID], [Name])  
    VALUES (2, N'Administration') 
    INSERT [Department] ([DepartmentID], [Name])  
    VALUES (3, N'Sales') 
    INSERT [Department] ([DepartmentID], [Name])  
    VALUES (4, N'Marketing') 
    INSERT [Department] ([DepartmentID], [Name])  
    VALUES (5, N'Finance') 
    GO 
    
    CREATE TABLE [Employee]( 
       [EmployeeID] [int] NOT NULL PRIMARY KEY, 
       [FirstName] VARCHAR(250) NOT NULL, 
       [LastName] VARCHAR(250) NOT NULL, 
       [DepartmentID] [int] NOT NULL REFERENCES [Department](DepartmentID), 
    ) ON [PRIMARY] 
    GO
     
    INSERT [Employee] ([EmployeeID], [FirstName], [LastName], [DepartmentID]) 
    VALUES (1, N'Orlando', N'Gee', 1 ) 
    INSERT [Employee] ([EmployeeID], [FirstName], [LastName], [DepartmentID]) 
    VALUES (2, N'Keith', N'Harris', 2 ) 
    INSERT [Employee] ([EmployeeID], [FirstName], [LastName], [DepartmentID]) 
    VALUES (3, N'Donna', N'Carreras', 3 ) 
    INSERT [Employee] ([EmployeeID], [FirstName], [LastName], [DepartmentID]) 
    VALUES (4, N'Janet', N'Gates', 3 ) 

    SQL Server CROSS APPLY vs INNER JOIN example

    The first query in Script #2 selects data from the Department table and uses a CROSS APPLY to evaluate the Employee table for each record of the Department table. The second query simply joins the Department table with the Employee table and all matching records are produced.

    --Script #2 - CROSS APPLY and INNER JOIN
    
    SELECT * FROM Department D 
    CROSS APPLY 
       ( 
       SELECT * FROM Employee E 
       WHERE E.DepartmentID = D.DepartmentID 
       ) A 
    GO
     
    SELECT * FROM Department D 
    INNER JOIN Employee E ON D.DepartmentID = E.DepartmentID 
    GO 

    f you look at the results, you can see see they are the same.

     

    Also, the execution plans for these queries are similar and they have an equal query cost, as you can see in the image below.

    So what is the use of APPLY operator? How does it differ from a JOIN and how does it help in writing more efficient queries? I will discuss this later.

    SQL Sever OUTER APPLY vs LEFT OUTER JOIN example

    The first query in Script #3 selects data from Department table and uses an OUTER APPLY to evaluate the Employee table for each record of the Department table. For those rows for which there is not a match in the Employee table, those rows contain NULL values as you can see in case of row 5 and 6 below. The second query simply uses a LEFT OUTER JOIN between the Department table and the Employee table. As expected the query returns all rows from Department table, even for those rows for which there is no match in the Employee table.

    --Script #3 - OUTER APPLY and LEFT OUTER JOIN
    
    SELECT * FROM Department D 
    OUTER APPLY 
       ( 
       SELECT * FROM Employee E 
       WHERE E.DepartmentID = D.DepartmentID 
       ) A 
    GO
     
    SELECT * FROM Department D 
    LEFT OUTER JOIN Employee E ON D.DepartmentID = E.DepartmentID 
    GO 

    Even though the above two queries return the same information, the execution plan is a bit different. Although cost wise there is not much difference, the query with the OUTER APPLY uses a Compute Scalar operator (with estimated operator cost of 0.0000103 or around 0%) before the Nested Loops operator to evaluate and produce the columns of the Employee table.

    Joining table valued functions and tables using APPLY operators

     In Script #4, I am creating a table-valued function which accepts DepartmentID as its parameter and returns all the employees who belong to this department. The next query selects data from the Department table and uses a CROSS APPLY to join with the function we created. It passes the DepartmentID for each row from the outer table expression (in our case Department table) and evaluates the function for each row similar to a correlated subquery. The next query uses the OUTER APPLY in place of the CROSS APPLY and hence unlike the CROSS APPLY which returned only correlated data, the OUTER APPLY returns non-correlated data as well, placing NULLs into the missing columns.

    --Script #4 - APPLY with table-valued function
    
    IF EXISTS (SELECT * FROM sys.objects WHERE OBJECT_ID = OBJECT_ID(N'[fn_GetAllEmployeeOfADepartment]') AND type IN (N'IF')) 
    BEGIN 
       DROP FUNCTION dbo.fn_GetAllEmployeeOfADepartment 
    END 
    GO
     
    CREATE FUNCTION dbo.fn_GetAllEmployeeOfADepartment(@DeptID AS INT)  
    RETURNS TABLE 
    AS 
    RETURN 
       ( 
       SELECT * FROM Employee E 
       WHERE E.DepartmentID = @DeptID 
       ) 
    GO
     
    SELECT * FROM Department D 
    CROSS APPLY dbo.fn_GetAllEmployeeOfADepartment(D.DepartmentID) 
    GO
     
    SELECT * FROM Department D 
    OUTER APPLY dbo.fn_GetAllEmployeeOfADepartment(D.DepartmentID) 
    GO 

    ]]

    You might be wondering if we can use a simple join in place of the above queries, the answer is NO. If you replace the CROSS/OUTER APPLY in the above queries with an INNER JOIN/LEFT OUTER JOIN, specifying the ON clause with 1=1 and run the query, you will get the error "The multi-part identifier "D.DepartmentID" could not be bound.". This is because with JOINs the execution context of the outer query is different from the execution context of the function (or a derived table), and you cannot bind a value/variable from the outer query to the function as a parameter. Hence the APPLY operator is required for such queries.

    So in summary the APPLY operator is required when you have to use a table-valued function in the query, but it can also be used with inline SELECT statements.

    Joining table valued system functions and tables using APPLY operators

    Let me show you another query with a Dynamic Management Function (DMF). Script #5 returns all the currently executing user queries except for the queries being executed by the current session. As you can see in the script below, the sys.dm_exec_requestsdynamic management view is being CROSS APPLY'ed with the sys.dm_exec_sql_text dynamic management function which accepts a "plan handle" for the query and the "plan handle" is being passed from the left/outer expression to the function to return the data.

    --Script #5 - APPLY with Dynamic Management Function (DMF)
    
    USE master 
    GO
     
    SELECT DB_NAME(r.database_id) AS [Database], st.[text] AS [Query]  
    FROM sys.dm_exec_requests r 
    CROSS APPLY sys.dm_exec_sql_text(r.plan_handle) st 
    WHERE r.session_Id > 50           -- Consider spids for users only, no system spids. 
    AND r.session_Id NOT IN (@@SPID)  -- Don't include request from current spid. 

    Note, for the above query, the [text] column in the query returns all queries submitted in a batch. If you want to see only the active (currently executing) query you can use the statement_start_offset and statement_end_offset columns to trim the active part of the query. Refer to this tip How to isolate the current running commands in SQL Server for a good example.

    Other Notes

    As I told you before there are certain scenarios where a query with an APPLY operator performs better than a query with regular joins. I am not going to delve into much details rather here are some articles that discuss this topic in greater detail.

    Please note, the APPLY operator is not an ANSI operator but rather an extension of SQL Server T-SQL (available in SQL Server 2005 and later), so if you plan to port your database to some other DBMS take this into consideration.

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  • 原文地址:https://www.cnblogs.com/zhangdongsheng/p/10048321.html
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