Which sql data type should we use for number bases primary key:
- int
- bigint
- numeric
- float
Which sql data type should we use for number bases primary key:
Generally, int
.
bigint
if you think you'll have more rows than there are atoms in the universe.
uniqueidentifier
is useful if you need globally unique keys (keys that are guaranteed to be unique across all tables in your schema, maybe even universally unique (I don't remember))
The other two I wouldn't use they're not integral types (they have fractions, which just don't make a lot of sense as keys)
more rows than there are atoms in the universe
refers to the MAX for uint64, but sometimes you just need to use bigint to go past max for uint32. Two examples you might come across in practice: a data-record for every human alive exceeds 32-bit limit; similarly translating an IPv6 address into a uint requires 48 bits (i like using the other 16 for flags or sometimes a low-res timestamp ;] )
– Garet Claborn
Apr 12 '14 at 17:00
bigint
's 64-bit max value is far from the estimated number of atoms in the universe, -- around 10^80 -- which would not fit in even a 256-bit integer. :)
– Charles Burns
Mar 28 '15 at 5:26
You really need to keep two separate issues apart:
1) the primary key is a logical construct - one of the key candidates that uniquely and reliably identifies a row in your table. This can be anything, really - an INT, a GUID, a string - pick what makes most sense for your scenario.
2) the clustering key (the column or columns that define the "clustered index" on the table) - this is a physical storage-related thing, and here, a small, stable, ever-increasing data type is your best pick - INT or BIGINT as your default option.
By default, the primary key on a SQL Server table is also used as the clustering key - but that doesn't need to be that way! I've personally seems massive performance gains over time when breaking up the previous GUID-based Primary Clustered Key into two separate key - the primary (logical) key on the GUID, and the clustering (ordering) key on a separate INT IDENTITY(1,1) column.
The index fragmentation was down to minimal levels, and thus the index seek performance was was up - highly recommended !
Marc
One huge reason to not use GUIDs for PKs is their terrible fill ratio for index pages - such misuse can dramatically increase your I/O performance costs. GUIDs should be left as AK's and instead drive queries with int-derived PK's wherever possible.
for 32-bit processors, an int is likely to be the most efficient size for processing.
unsigned int
of whichever size that meets your particular needs