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Posted by Gert-Jan Strik on 01/12/07 18:56
Emin wrote:
>
> Dear Experts,
>
> I have a fairly simple query in which adding a where clause slows
> things down by at least a factor of 100. The following is the slow
> version of the query
>
> -------------------------
> SELECT * FROM
> ( Select x.event_date From x FULL OUTER JOIN y
> ON x.event_date = y.event_date
> ) innerQ
> WHERE ( innerQ.event_date >= {ts '1980-01-01 00:00:00'} )
> ------------------------
>
> Removing the where clause makes the query run quickly. This seems
> extremely strange because it seems like SQL Server should simply be
> able to take the results of innerQ and discard anything with a date
> that doesn't match. If I instead split the query into two pieces where
> I create a temp table and put innerQ into that and then do the select *
> WHERE (...) from the temp table things work fine.
>
> Any thoughts on what SQL Server might be doing to make things slow and
> how I can fix it?
>
> Thanks,
> -Emin
It sounds like the optimizer is somewhat confused over your query.
It would be interesting to see the actual query plan. You can get that
by running SET SHOWPLAN_TEXT ON and then run the query (and then SET
SHOWPLAN_TEXT OFF).
I agree with Alex, that you could try to write the query the way you
normally would, like this:
SELECT x.event_date
FROM x
LEFT JOIN Y ON y.event_date = x.event_date
WHERE event_date >= '19800101'
HTH,
Gert-Jan
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