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Learn T-SQL Querying

Learn T-SQL Querying

By : Pedro Lopes, Lahoud
4.2 (9)
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Learn T-SQL Querying

Learn T-SQL Querying

4.2 (9)
By: Pedro Lopes, Lahoud

Overview of this book

Transact-SQL (T-SQL) is Microsoft's proprietary extension to the SQL language used with Microsoft SQL Server and Azure SQL Database. This book will be a usefu to learning the art of writing efficient T-SQL code in modern SQL Server versions as well as the Azure SQL Database. The book will get you started with query processing fundamentals to help you write powerful, performant T-SQL queries. You will then focus on query execution plans and leverage them for troubleshooting. In later chapters, you will explain how to identify various T-SQL patterns and anti-patterns. This will help you analyze execution plans to gain insights into current performance, and determine whether or not a query is scalable. You will also build diagnostic queries using dynamic management views (DMVs) and dynamic management functions (DMFs) to address various challenges in T-SQL execution. Next, you will work with the built-in tools of SQL Server to shorten the time taken to address query performance and scalability issues. In the concluding chapters, this will guide you through implementing various features, such as Extended Events, Query Store, and Query Tuning Assistant, using hands-on examples. By the end of the book, you will have developed the skills to determine query performance bottlenecks, avoid pitfalls, and discover the anti-patterns in use.
Table of Contents (18 chapters)
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1
Section 1: Query Processing Fundamentals
5
Section 2: Dos and Donts of T-SQL
10
Section 3: Assemble Your Query Troubleshooting Toolbox

Pitfalls of complex views

Views are often used with the same intent as UDFs, to allow easy reuse of what could be otherwise a complex expression to inline in our T-SQL query. Often developers build a view that will serve multiple queries, and then just select from that view with different SELECT statements and different filters, be those joins or search predicates. However, what may look like a seemingly harmless T-SQL construct may be detrimental for query performance if the underlying view is complex.

Imagine that in the AdventureWorks sample database, a developer built an all-encompassing view that gets data on all company employees, as in the following example:

CREATE OR ALTER VIEW [HumanResources].[vEmployeeNew]
AS
SELECT e.[BusinessEntityID], p.[Title], p.[FirstName], p.[MiddleName],
p.[LastName], p.[Suffix], e.[JobTitle], pp.[PhoneNumber],
pnt.[Name] AS [PhoneNumberType...
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