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Limiting Deleted Rows by Using TOP

You can use the TOP clause to limit the number of rows that are deleted in a DELETE statement. When a TOP (n) clause is used with DELETE, the delete operation is performed on a random selection of n number of rows.

For example, the following statement deletes 20 random rows from the PurchaseOrderDetail table that have due dates that are earlier than July 1, 2002.

USE AdventureWorks;
GO
DELETE TOP (20) 
FROM Purchasing.PurchaseOrderDetail
WHERE DueDate < '20020701';
GO

If you have to use TOP to delete rows in a meaningful chronological order, you must use TOP together with ORDER BY in a subselect statement. The following query deletes the 10 rows of the PurchaseOrderDetail table that have the earliest due dates. To ensure that only 10 rows are deleted, the column specified in the subselect statement (PurchaseOrderID) is the primary key of the table. Using a nonkey column in the subselect statement may result in the deletion of more than 10 rows if the specified column contains duplicate values.

USE AdventureWorks;
GO
DELETE FROM Purchasing.PurchaseOrderDetail
WHERE PurchaseOrderDetailID IN
   (SELECT TOP 10 PurchaseOrderDetailID 
    FROM Purchasing.PurchaseOrderDetail 
    ORDER BY DueDate ASC);
GO

See Also

Concepts

Deleting Rows by Using DELETE
Deleting All Rows by Using TRUNCATE TABLE
Deleting Rows in Result Sets
Limiting Result Sets by Using TOP and PERCENT

Other Resources

TOP (Transact-SQL)
DELETE (Transact-SQL)
Deleting Data in a Table

Help and Information

Getting SQL Server 2005 Assistance

Change History

Release History

5 December 2005

New content:
  • Added information about specifying a primary key when you use a subselect statement with an ORDER BY clause.