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In my table there will be 50 columns with float datatype, They may be empty ( ie null) , partially empty or completely full for each row.

What is the ideal design for this case

  1. To have float as column datatype and null for empty values
  2. To have float as column datatype and -1.0 for empty values
  3. To have varchar as datatype and null for empty values.

I have come across the fact that if columns are of variable length then the null will not occupy any space. In that case 3rd option would be desirable but am afraid of the performance due to string comparisons for search queries.

On considering performance and disk usage , which is the ideal solution for my table.

EDIT :Based on the suggestions I am dropping of the 2nd and 3rd choice. With respect to the first choice will it be better If I create 50 seperate tables for each column and join to the main table with a primary key . Such that there won't be empty spaces and aslo I can use decimal/long as datatype. Will this solution hold good ?

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  • I would prefer you to use varchar for all three cases. And, when required, cast varchar to float.
    – Paresh J
    Nov 11, 2014 at 14:54
  • If it's a numerical value that you might want to sum and do math operations on, by all means store it as a numerical datatype! Don't just store everything as varchar because it's so easy to do !! It'll come back and bite you later on..... so here, you should use either option 1 or 2 - but most definitely NOT option 3!! And while you're at it: I would argue for decimal instead of Float - float is inherently prone to rounding errors etc., whereas decimal is not...
    – marc_s
    Nov 11, 2014 at 15:11

3 Answers 3

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Use the most appropriate datatype. If the columns are floats, then use floats. On the limited info, I would probably go with option 1. 3 would be a terrible idea.

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  • Any comparisons between option 1 vs 3 ? Nov 11, 2014 at 14:50
  • Option 3 is totally inappropriate. @Thorsten has given a better explanation below.
    – DB101
    Nov 11, 2014 at 15:23
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The database offers you many datatypes. So you can take the most appropriate.

Of course you can store a decimal number in a varchar, but why would you ever do such a thing? You would have to define the format you store the number in and then keep this in mind every time you use it. Everytime you want to calculate with it, you will have to convert. Everytime you want to show it, you would have to convert your decimal seperator to the client's decimal seperator. Instead of storing four or eight bytes for the number you would store two handling bytes plus bytes per character. Many, many cons, no pros.

-1.0 instead of null? What the hell is this supposed to be good for? So to have to replace SUM(col) with SUM(CASE WHEN col = -1.0 THEN NULL ELSE col END) everytime? Stay away from this. Use, what the dbms offers you. NULL is the thing to use when no value is given.

So solution 1 is the only one that makes sense. However, are you sure you want to use FLOAT? Are your numbers that big? Otherwise I see no good in using an approximate type instead of storing the number precisely with the DECIMAL data type.

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  • Just for my reference, if it was a varchar column, would an empty varchar be equivalent to a null?
    – SILENT
    Jul 11, 2015 at 0:14
  • @SILENT: '' is not NULL. The first means "empty" and has a length of 0. The second means "not known" and has a length of NULL. So you could distinguish between knowing that for example a person has no middle name and not knowing yet whether the person has a middle name or not. Often, however, you don't want that distinction and would exclude one of the two values; either by making a column NOT NULL, or by using a constraint forbidding the empty string. (The Oracle database is an exception. There '' is NULL, which is helpful sometimes, but really annoying other times.) Jul 11, 2015 at 10:10
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Use the datatype of the value required for the cell. If the values are always numeric use FLOAT or another appropriate numeric datatype. A search and comparison of numeric values alone is likely going to be much faster than comparison of textual matching with type conversions.

If storage is of major concern consider the option to use SPARSE columns in your table. Its optimized for null value rows. NULL values in SPARSE columns negates its storage expense. http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/cc280604.aspx

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