29

I am wondering if there are performance implications of multiple .Where() statements. For example I could write:

var contracts =  Context.Contract
    .Where(
        c1 =>
            c1.EmployeeId == employeeId
        )
    .Where(
        c1 =>
            !Context.Contract.Any(
                c2 =>
                    c2.EmployeeId == employeeId
                    && c1.StoreId == c2.StoreId
                    && SqlFunctions.DateDiff("day", c2.TerminationDate.Value, c1.DateOfHire.Value) == 1
                )
        )
    .Where(
        c1 =>
            !Context.EmployeeTask.Any(
                t =>
                    t.ContractId == c1.Id
                )
        );

Or alternatively I could combine them all into the one Where() clause, like so:

var contracts =  Context.Contract
    .Where(
        c1 =>
            c1.EmployeeId == employeeId
            && !Context.Contract.Any(
                c2 =>
                    c2.EmployeeId == employeeId
                    && c1.StoreId == c2.StoreId
                    && SqlFunctions.DateDiff("day", c2.TerminationDate.Value, c1.DateOfHire.Value) == 1
                )
            && !Context.Employee_Task.Any(
                t =>
                    t.ContractId == c1.Id
                )
        );

Does the chain of Where() clauses hurt performance or are they equivalent?

1
  • I think LINQ compiles both to a similar expression, regardless of how you build it (as long as you don't call ToList() or the sort somewhere in between 'Where's)
    – sinelaw
    Jan 19, 2011 at 13:06

1 Answer 1

27

In LINQ to Objects, there will be a very small performance hit, because basically the iterator chain will be longer - fetching the next element means going up a long chain of MoveNext() calls.

In LINQ to SQL and similar providers, I'd expect the same SQL to be generated either way, so it wouldn't impact performance there.

EDIT: Since writing this I've found out a bit more about the LINQ to Objects implementation - it's a little more complicated...

4
  • 1
    Allright. Thank you very much. I don't know if the example is the best one but sometimes I think I will find it easier to read and understand some queries if I chain several where statements that has nothing to do with each other. /John
    – John
    Jan 19, 2011 at 13:32
  • @Jon, if I understand you correctly then, for Objects there's the chance for optimization as per the order of the where clauses (which in SQL doesn't exist since the optimiser does that for you)? I imagine in LINQ-to-Entities that optimisation is also handled by the back-end?
    – ekkis
    Sep 2, 2011 at 20:00
  • 3
    @ekkis: Yes; if you put a cheap filter which gets rid of most candidate elements first, that will speed things up a lot.
    – Jon Skeet
    Sep 2, 2011 at 20:04
  • @Jon, for those of use more used to having an optimiser, that's really useful to know. thanks! (you get an uptick)
    – ekkis
    Sep 6, 2011 at 23:10

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.