Which sql data type should we use for number bases primary key:
- int
- bigint
- numeric
- float
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Which sql data type should we use for number bases primary key:
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Generally,
The other two I wouldn't use they're not integral types (they have fractions, which just don't make a lot of sense as keys) |
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You really need to keep two separate issues apart: 1) the primary key is a logical construct - one of the key candidates that uniquely and reliably identifies a row in your table. This can be anything, really - an INT, a GUID, a string - pick what makes most sense for your scenario. 2) the clustering key (the column or columns that define the "clustered index" on the table) - this is a physical storage-related thing, and here, a small, stable, ever-increasing data type is your best pick - INT or BIGINT as your default option. By default, the primary key on a SQL Server table is also used as the clustering key - but that doesn't need to be that way! I've personally seems massive performance gains over time when breaking up the previous GUID-based Primary Clustered Key into two separate key - the primary (logical) key on the GUID, and the clustering (ordering) key on a separate INT IDENTITY(1,1) column. The index fragmentation was down to minimal levels, and thus the index seek performance was was up - highly recommended ! Marc |
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for 32-bit processors, an int is likely to be the most efficient size for processing. |
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One huge reason to not use GUIDs for PKs is their terrible fill ratio for index pages - such misuse can dramatically increase your I/O performance costs. GUIDs should be left as AK's and instead drive queries with int-derived PK's wherever possible. |
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