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In Sql Server, I have a table containing 46 million rows. In "Title" column of table, I want make search. The word may be at any index of field value.

For example:

Value in table: BROTHERS COMPANY

Search string: ROTHER

I want this search to match the given record. This is exactly what LIKE '%ROTHER%' do. However, LIKE '%%' usage should not be used on large tables because of performance issues. How can I achieve it?

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  • Do you have full text index? Try posting table structure and use "Contains" for searching Jan 6, 2016 at 9:33

2 Answers 2

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Though I don't know your requirements, your best approach may be to challenge them. Middle-of-the-string searches are usually not very practical. If you can get your users to perform prefix searches (broth%) then you can easily use Full Text's wildcard search (CONTAINS(*, '"broth*"')). Full Text can also handle suffix searches (%rothers) with a little extra work.

But when it comes to middle-of-the-string searches with SQL Server, you're stuck using LIKE. However you may be able to improve performance of LIKE by using a binary collation as explained in this article. (I hate to post a link without including its content but it is way too long of an article to post here and I don't understand the approach enough to sum it up.)

If that doesn't help and if middle-of-the-string searches are that important of a requirement then you should consider using a different search solution like Lucene.

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  • You're right. SQL Server has no equivalent of pg_trgm - trigram search module from PostgreSQL. It's possible to write own trigram serach mechanism, but it uses complex queries and procedures: sqlperformance.com/2017/09/sql-performance/…. Pg_trgm is already optimised and easy to use. Feb 19, 2021 at 22:17
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Add Full-Text index if you want.

You can search the table using CONTAINS:

SELECT *
FROM YourTable
WHERE CONTAINS(TableColumnName, 'SearchItem')
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  • No. Because if you search in google then you will find lots of resources about this. Please don't misunderstand. Jan 6, 2016 at 10:16
  • Full text search cannot do what I want. Because Full Text Search parses the words and does NOT search string in any words. Jan 6, 2016 at 12:28
  • 1
    Link is broken...
    – Gabriel
    Mar 17, 2022 at 16:18

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