What is main difference between INSERT INTO table VALUES ..
and INSERT INTO table SET
?
Example:
INSERT INTO table (a, b, c) VALUES (1,2,3)
INSERT INTO table SET a=1, b=2, c=3
And what about performance of these two?
As far as I can tell, both syntaxes are equivalent. The first is SQL standard, the second is MySQL's extension.
So they should be exactly equivalent performance wise.
http://dev.mysql.com/doc/refman/5.6/en/insert.html says:
INSERT inserts new rows into an existing table. The INSERT ... VALUES and INSERT ... SET forms of the statement insert rows based on explicitly specified values. The INSERT ... SELECT form inserts rows selected from another table or tables.
INSERT INTO table SET
? Is this even possible?
Jun 8, 2012 at 22:42
I think the extension is intended to allow a similar syntax for inserts and updates. In Oracle, a similar syntactical trick is:
UPDATE table SET (col1, col2) = (SELECT val1, val2 FROM dual)
INSERT ... SET ...
and INSERT ... VALUES ...
. For the feature you have shorter, faster-to-write code, increased readability, and the elimination of typos caused by mixing up your column order when writing your VALUES
clause. My gut tells me that on net the good outweighs the bad, but your judgement may differ.
Oct 18, 2014 at 23:01
Since the syntaxes are equivalent (in MySQL anyhow), I prefer the INSERT INTO table SET x=1, y=2
syntax, since it is easier to modify and easier to catch errors in the statement, especially when inserting lots of columns. If you have to insert 10 or 15 or more columns, it's really easy to mix something up using the (x, y) VALUES (1,2)
syntax, in my opinion.
If portability between different SQL standards is an issue, then maybe INSERT INTO table (x, y) VALUES (1,2)
would be preferred.
And if you want to insert multiple records in a single query, it doesn't seem like the INSERT INTO ... SET
syntax will work, whereas the other one will. But in most practical cases, you're looping through a set of records to do inserts anyhow, though there could be some cases where maybe constructing one large query to insert a bunch of rows into a table in one query, vs. a query for each row, might have a performance improvement. Really don't know.
INSERT INTO table SET
is not standard. It seems much clearer. I guess I'll have to use theINSERT INTO table ([column name, column name b]) VALUES (['value a', 'value b'])
syntax anyway though to save myself from trouble if I port over to Postgres.