Book Image

Learn T-SQL Querying - Second Edition

By : Pedro Lopes, Pam Lahoud
Book Image

Learn T-SQL Querying - Second Edition

By: Pedro Lopes, Pam Lahoud

Overview of this book

Data professionals seeking to excel in Transact-SQL (T-SQL) for Microsoft SQL Server and Azure SQL Database often lack comprehensive resources. This updated second edition of Learn T-SQL Querying focuses on indexing queries and crafting elegant T-SQL code, catering to all data professionals seeking mastery in modern SQL Server versions and Azure SQL Database. Starting with query processing fundamentals, this book lays a solid foundation for writing performant T-SQL queries. You’ll explore the mechanics of the Query Optimizer and Query Execution Plans, learning how to analyze execution plans for insights into current performance and scalability. Through dynamic management views (DMVs) and dynamic management functions (DMFs), you’ll build diagnostic queries. This book thoroughly covers indexing for T-SQL performance and provides insights into SQL Server’s built-in tools for expedited resolution of query performance and scalability issues. Further, hands-on examples will guide you through implementing features such as avoiding UDF pitfalls, understanding predicate SARGability, Query Store, and Query Tuning Assistant. By the end of this book, you‘ll have developed the ability to identify query performance bottlenecks, recognize anti-patterns, and skillfully avoid such pitfalls.
Table of Contents (18 chapters)
1
Part 1: Query Processing Fundamentals
4
Part 2: Dos and Don’ts of T-SQL
9
Part 3: Assembling Our Query Troubleshooting Toolbox

Pitfalls of correlated sub-queries

It is not uncommon to use sub-queries to express certain predicates inline in queries, but developers must keep in mind that joins are frequently better than correlated sub-queries. The following query examples can be executed in the scope of the AdventureWorks sample database:

SELECT wo.StockedQty, wo.WorkOrderID, wor.ActualCost
FROM Production.WorkOrder AS wo
INNER JOIN Production.WorkOrderRouting AS wor ON wo.WorkOrderID = wor.WorkOrderID
WHERE wor.WorkOrderID = 12345;
SELECT wo.StockedQty, wo.WorkOrderID,
      (SELECT wor.ActualCost
          FROM Production.WorkOrderRouting AS wor
          WHERE wor.WorkOrderID = 12345)
FROM Production.WorkOrder AS wo
WHERE wo.WorkOrderID IN
      (SELECT wor.WorkOrderID
          FROM Production.WorkOrderRouting...