I'm currently working with a database that has two indexes for a specific table. The index I want has two columns "Name" (varchar2) and "Time" (number). When I write the query
SELECT SOMETHING
FROM MYTABLE
WHERE NAME = 'SOME-NAME'
AND TIME BETWEEN STARTVALUE AND ENDVALUE
(where STARTVALUE and ENDVALUE are numbers) it does not use the index. However if I use the following query instead
SELECT SOMETHING
FROM MYTABLE
WHERE NAME = 'SOME-NAME'
AND TIME BETWEEN MY_FUNC('STARTQUAL') AND MY_FUNC('ENDQUAL')
it does.
The only difference I can think of is that MY_FUNC explicitly returns a value of type NUMBER - is it possible that the query optimizer is confused about the data type for STARTVALUE and ENDVALUE specified explicitly and is refusing to use the index (I saw some similar threads that mentioned a type conflict was the cause).
Note:
The value being returned by MY_FUNC is EXACTLY the same value that I am specifying in the first query.
The index in question is UNDOUBTEDLY (absolutely no question) the correct index to be using and execution times are orders of magnitude faster when it does.
- I have even specified a query hint with the first query and it refuses to use the index.
I know there must be something silly / simple that I'm overlooking but I just can't see it.
Thanks in advance for your assistance.
and TIME <= STARTQUAL and TIME >= ENDQUAL
? Can you print the EXPLAIN PLAN?to_number(STARTQUAL)
inBETWEEN
. Can you also pasteMY_FUNC
definition?