Hey all, quick question (probably simple but I haven't touched SQL in a long while and I must be searching the wrong terms) - If I have a column in a db that contains comma separated values (e.g. '123,456,987'), how should I test if the column contains a particular value, say '456'?
Oops, I just noticed there's only one person here! For anyone that sees this later, I found a solution with a little more searching, but thanks anyway!
I have 300k records in my candidate table and there left join with country and address but the problem is its taking too much time to load only 20 records as I am showing only 20 in datatables
So How can make my query faster considering that i have added indexes to respective columns wherever needed
@Alex Yeah, problem with LINQ queries is that they have to run successfully on all databases they use so they normally aren't the best for performance queries
It sounds stupid when you see it written that way ... but most of the performance complaints or "linq did bad stuff to my db" type complaints I have seen seem to be this problem
EF (the ORM I use these days) is pretty good at building really efficient queries assuming you asked a "good question"
Trouble with that approach is its not maintainable or economically possible in my case
I have an API layer that's queryable ... the business logic generates SQL queries ... recently I had an issue in one particular query so I profiled it ... the SQL statement was 89KB of generated code
we run millions of of unique such queries every day