I have a customers and orders table in SQL Server 2008 R2. Both have indexes on the customer id (called id
). I need to return details about all customers in the customers table and information from the orders table, such as details of the first order.
I currently left join my customers table on a subquery of the orders table, with the subquery returning the information I need about the orders. For example:
SELECT c.id
,c.country
,First_orders.product
,First_orders.order_id
FROM customers c
LEFT JOIN SELECT( id,
product
FROM (SELECT id
,product
,order_id
,ROW_NUMBER() OVER (PARTITION BY id ORDER BY Order_Date asc) as order_No
FROM orders) orders
WHERE Order_no = 1) First_Orders
ON c.id = First_orders.id
I'm quite new to SQL and want to understand if I'm doing this efficiently. I end up left joining quite a few subqueries like this onto the customers table in one select query and it can take tens of minutes to run.
So am I doing this efficiently or can it be improved? For example, I'm not sure if my index on id in the orders table is of any use and maybe I could speed up the query by creating a temporary table of what is in the subquery first and creating a unique index on id in the temporary table so SQL Server knows id
is now a unique column and then joining my customers table to this temporary table? I typically have one or two million rows in the customers and orders tables.
Many thanks in advance!
WITH
command prefix instead. Performance-wise it shouldn't make any difference though, it's just a matter of convention and readability.