26

I am developing one android database application . I just want to know which code execute faster and what is the difference between them?

Query - 1 =

db.rawQuery("select * from user_table where user_id =" + userId, null);

Query - 2 =

db.query(USER_TABLE_NAME, ALL_COLUMNS, "user_id = " + userId, null, null, null, null);
2
  • ...try it and see? I'm going to guess "the same" for all intents and purposes. But, please use placeholders in either case.
    – user166390
    Jan 12, 2012 at 5:58
  • If you have a build system already set up, do some benchmarks on it. Also, what kind of workload are you expecting and what margins in speed are you looking for? Jan 12, 2012 at 6:09

2 Answers 2

18

Use query.

Android precompile queries and using too many different raw queries may cause performance issue.

Use rawQuery only when absolutely needed.

Also, both your example have a MAJOR security issue of SQL Injection.

You should sanitize the userId.

The most obvious thing to do is let Android do it by using:

db.query(USER_TABLE_NAME, ALL_COLUMNS, "user_id = ?", new String[] {userId}, null, null, null);
10
  • 4
    RE precompiled queries: Those only apply when using PreparedStatement. Query() just builds the string and passes it to rawQuery().
    – Jon Adams
    Aug 13, 2014 at 23:07
  • Well, PreparedStatement are meant to run the same query multiple time, true, but I think some kind of optimization is also performed by the driver. I've encountered some error when using multiple different queries of android complaining too many statement was provided. :) Aug 15, 2014 at 20:25
  • @JonAdams Please help me understand your comment, 'only apply when using preparedstatement', where do we use preparedstatement while same can be achieved by rawQuery? (ie you can put '?' , and pass arguments?)
    – Darpan
    Apr 24, 2015 at 5:54
  • @Darpan Yes, you can still put parameters in all query types. I was just clarifying that the parts about performance in this answer weren't quite correct.
    – Jon Adams
    Apr 24, 2015 at 12:40
  • @Darpan, more info about prepared statements: stackoverflow.com/a/29797229/3681880
    – Suragch
    Apr 27, 2015 at 11:53
8

Looking at SQLiteDatabase.java in the android source shows that the query(..) ends up calling the QueryBuilder to build the query as a single string and then it essentially calls rawQuery(). They should be roughly equivalent, assuming that you also did the same work to build your own statement.

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