I'm actually in a dilemma right now with regards to whether or not to use Guid.
I have a non-transactional table called Posts with a bigint as PK.
As far as I understand, using Guid as PK would hamper query performance. However, in order to make query string truly unique, I decided to add a column called specialID
with Guid default value newid()
. This would make all my query strings truly unique since all I need to do is to execute the following query:
SELECT *
FROM Posts p
WHERE p.specialID = '[query-string]'; // For single record retrieval
As for Joins, bigint PK will come into play as follows:
SELECT p.id, p.specialID, ul.name as Writer
FROM Posts p
JOIN Users ul ON ul.id = p.writer;
My colleague, however, disagreed and said that it would still hamper query performance. Why? And should I continue this way? A truly unique query string isn't necessary, but would be preferred. If it would indeed hamper performance, how can we go about having a truly unique query string?
INT
identity values": if you use anINT IDENTITY
starting at 1, and you insert a row every second, every day, all year long, you need 66.5 years before you hit the 2 billion limit ....