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I am really surprisde to see that in my MS SQL table, I am defining a field varchar and doing group by with another table's field.

When I do the same thing with the column as nvarchar it is 3 second faster than varchar when, theoretically, varchar should be faster because of 1 byte char.

Can anyone explain me why nvarchar is faster in this instance?

Thanks in advance.

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    Could you supply the query plan and statistics? Chances are that changing the type resulted in new statistics being generated and these result in a better plan.
    – Keith
    Jun 6, 2011 at 10:33
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    nvarchar is certainly not faster. @Keith's explanation sounds likely. Jun 6, 2011 at 10:34
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    @Shuvra: what if you change the type back to 'varchar'? If it's the statistics, you should now have better performance than first. Jun 6, 2011 at 10:49
  • how can i see query plan and statistics?
    – Shuvra
    Jun 6, 2011 at 10:59
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    Is there a join/comparison with another nvarchar column? The conversion is expensive, so converting from varchar to nvarchar may actually improve things. Jun 6, 2011 at 11:00

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Operating systems use Unicode internally. I think that makes nvarchar faster since it does not need any converting.

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  • When you read a varchar the OS needs an encoding conversions. With nvarchar you do not need this. Jun 8, 2011 at 18:26

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