|  | Posted by Dan Guzman on 08/08/07 04:05 
> My questions is, should I> create one index contains col1, col2, and col3, or create 3 seperated
 > columns.  I.e. each column has its own index.
 
 The short answer is that "it depends".  To be useful and used efficiently,
 indexes must be selective and the high-order column specified in WHERE or
 JOIN clauses.  Multi-column indexes are especially useful in cases where the
 high-order columns are specified in the query and can also cover the entire
 query when no other columns are needed.  Single column indexes are
 appropriate when you have a wide variety of queries.
 
 You might consider trying the Database Tuning Advisor (or Index Tuning
 Wizard in pre-SQL 2005 versions).  Although experienced DBAs will take the
 recommendations with a grain of salt, those tools are a good starting point.
 For optimum performance, scrutinize the execution plans of your most
 critical queries to ensure adequate indexes are in place.  Choose the
 clustered index wisely.
 
 --
 Hope this helps.
 
 Dan Guzman
 SQL Server MVP
 
 "Sonny" <SonnyKMI@gmail.com> wrote in message
 news:1186510203.040216.8690@o61g2000hsh.googlegroups.com...
 > Hi,
 >
 > Would like to know the performance differenece between Multi-column
 > Index vs Single Column Indexes.  Let's say I have a table with col1,
 > col2, col3 along with a primary key column and non-indexed columns.
 > In queries, I will use col1, col2, and col3 together and some times
 > just one or two of these three columns.  My questions is, should I
 > create one index contains col1, col2, and col3, or create 3 seperated
 > columns.  I.e. each column has its own index.  Any performance
 > difference?
 >
 > Thanks a lot.
 >
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