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In terms of SQL terminology, does HEAP stands for a table that has Non-Clustered index?

Or there is a nuance or it has completely a different meaning?

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  • A heap table is a table that has no clustered index. Only one index can be the clustered index so if a table has more than one index, only one of them may be the clustered index. Apr 1, 2012 at 21:20

3 Answers 3

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A heap can have either no index at all or a non-clustered index. But a clustered table can also have non-clustered indexs on top so -

does HEAP stands for a table that has Non-Clustered index?

is not a great definition as a table with a non-clustered index could be either a clustered table or a heap.

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A heap is a table without a clustered index. Simple as that!

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A heap is a table without a clustered index. Heaps have one row in sys.partitions, with index_id = 0 for each partition used by the heap. By default, a heap has a single partition. When a heap has multiple partitions, each partition has a heap structure that contains the data for that specific partition.

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