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Monday, September 10, 2012

Types of Indexes on tablels

The following table lists the types of indexes available in SQL Server and provides links to additional information.

Index type Description Additional information
ClusteredA clustered index sorts and stores the data rows of the table or view in order based on the clustered index key. The clustered index is implemented as a B-tree index structure that supports fast retrieval of the rows, based on their clustered index key values.Clustered Index Design Guidelines
Clustered Index Structures
NonclusteredA nonclustered index can be defined on a table or view with a clustered index or on a heap. Each index row in the nonclustered index contains the nonclustered key value and a row locator. This locator points to the data row in the clustered index or heap having the key value. The rows in the index are stored in the order of the index key values, but the data rows are not guaranteed to be in any particular order unless a clustered index is created on the table.Nonclustered Index Design Guidelines
Nonclustered Index Structures
UniqueA unique index ensures that the index key contains no duplicate values and therefore every row in the table or view is in some way unique.
Both clustered and nonclustered indexes can be unique.
Unique Index Design Guidelines
Index with included columnsA nonclustered index that is extended to include nonkey columns in addition to the key columns.Index with Included Columns
Indexed viewsAn index on a view materializes (executes), the view and the result set is permanently stored in a unique clustered index in the same way a table with a clustered index is stored. Nonclustered indexes on the view can be added after the clustered index is created.Designing Indexed Views
Full-text A special type of token-based functional index that is built and maintained by the Microsoft Full-Text Engine for SQL Server. It provides efficient support for sophisticated word searches in character string data. Full-Text Indexes
Spatial A spatial index provides the ability to perform certain operations more efficiently on spatial objects (spatial data) in a column of the geometry data type. The spatial index reduces the number of objects on which relatively costly spatial operations need to be applied. Spatial Indexing Overview
FilteredAn optimized nonclustered index, especially suited to cover queries that select from a well-defined subset of data. It uses a filter predicate to index a portion of rows in the table. A well-designed filtered index can improve query performance, reduce index maintenance costs, and reduce index storage costs compared with full-table indexes.Filtered Index Design Guidelines
XMLA shredded, and persisted, representation of the XML binary large objects (BLOBs) in the xml data type column.Indexes on XML Data Type Columns

 

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