Indexes on Computed Columns
You can define indexes on computed columns as long as the following requirements are met:
Ownership requirements
Determinism requirements
Precision requirements
Data type requirements
SET option requirements
Ownership Requirements
All function references in the computed column must have the same owner as the table.
Determinism Requirements
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Expressions are deterministic if they always return the same result for a specified set of inputs. The IsDeterministic property of the COLUMNPROPERTY function reports whether a computed_column_expression is deterministic. |
The computed_column_expression must be deterministic. A computed_column_expression is deterministic when one or more of the following is true:
All functions that are referenced by the expression are deterministic and precise. These functions include both user-defined and built-in functions. For more information, see Deterministic and Nondeterministic Functions. Functions might be imprecise if the computed column is PERSISTED. For more information, see Creating Indexes on Persisted Computed Columns later in this topic.
All columns that are referenced in the expression come from the table that contains the computed column.
No column reference pulls data from multiple rows. For example, aggregate functions such as SUM or AVG depend on data from multiple rows and would make a computed_column_expression nondeterministic.
The computed_column_expression has no system data access or user data access.
Any computed column that contains a common language runtime (CLR) expression must be deterministic and marked PERSISTED before the column can be indexed. CLR user-defined type expressions are allowed in computed column definitions. Computed columns whose type is a CLR user-defined type can be indexed as long as the type is comparable. For more information, see CLR User-defined Types.
[!UWAGA]
When you refer to string literals of the date data type in indexed computed columns in SQL Server, we recommend that you explicitly convert the literal to the date type that you want by using a deterministic date format style. For a list of the date format styles that are deterministic, see CAST and CONVERT. Expressions that involve implicit conversion of character strings to date data types are considered nondeterministic, unless the database compatibility level is set to 80 or earlier. This is because the results depend on the LANGUAGE and DATEFORMAT settings of the server session. For example, the results of the expression CONVERT (datetime, '30 listopad 1996', 113) depend on the LANGUAGE setting because the string '30 listopad 1996' means different months in different languages. Similarly, in the expression DATEADD(mm,3,'2000-12-01'), the Database Engine interprets the string '2000-12-01' based on the DATEFORMAT setting.
Implicit conversion of non-Unicode character data between collations is also considered nondeterministic, unless the compatibility level is set to 80 or earlier.
When the database compatibility level setting is 90, you cannot create indexes on computed columns that contain these expressions. However, existing computed columns that contain these expressions from an upgraded database are maintainable. If you use indexed computed columns that contain implicit string to date conversions, to avoid possible index corruption, make sure that the LANGUAGE and DATEFORMAT settings are consistent in your databases and applications.
Precision Requirements
The computed_column_expression must be precise. A computed_column_expression is precise when one or more of the following is true:
It is not an expression of the float or real data types.
It does not use a float or real data type in its definition. For example, in the following statement, column y is int and deterministic but not precise.
CREATE TABLE t2 (a int, b int, c int, x float, y AS CASE x WHEN 0 THEN a WHEN 1 THEN b ELSE c END);
[!UWAGA]
Any float or real expression is considered imprecise and cannot be a key of an index; a float or real expression can be used in an indexed view but not as a key. This is true also for computed columns. Any function, expression, or user-defined function is considered imprecise if it contains any float or real expressions. This includes logical ones (comparisons).
The IsPrecise property of the COLUMNPROPERTY function reports whether a computed_column_expression is precise.
Data Type Requirements
The computed_column_expression defined for the computed column cannot evaluate to the text, ntext, or image data types.
Computed columns derived from image, ntext, text, varchar(max), nvarchar(max), varbinary(max), and xml data types can be indexed as long as the computed column data type is allowable as an index key column.
Computed columns derived from image, ntext, and text data types can be nonkey (included) columns in a nonclustered index as long as the computed column data type is allowable as a nonkey index column.
SET Option Requirements
The ANSI_NULLS connection-level option must be set to ON when the CREATE TABLE or ALTER TABLE statement that defines the computed column is executed. The OBJECTPROPERTY function reports whether the option is on through the IsAnsiNullsOn property.
The connection on which the index is created, and all connections trying INSERT, UPDATE, or DELETE statements that will change values in the index, must have six SET options set to ON and one option set to OFF. The optimizer ignores an index on a computed column for any SELECT statement executed by a connection that does not have these same option settings.
The NUMERIC_ROUNDABORT option must be set to OFF, and the following options must be set to ON:
ANSI_NULLS
ANSI_PADDING
ANSI_WARNINGS
ARITHABORT
CONCAT_NULL_YIELDS_NULL
QUOTED_IDENTIFIER
Setting ANSI_WARNINGS to ON implicitly sets ARITHABORT to ON when the database compatibility level is set to 90 or higher.
Creating Indexes on Persisted Computed Columns
You can create an index on a computed column that is defined with a deterministic, but imprecise, expression if the column is marked PERSISTED in the CREATE TABLE or ALTER TABLE statement. This means that the Database Engine stores the computed values in the table, and updates them when any other columns on which the computed column depends are updated. The Database Engine uses these persisted values when it creates an index on the column, and when the index is referenced in a query. This option enables you to create an index on a computed column when Database Engine cannot prove with accuracy whether a function that returns computed column expressions, particularly a CLR function that is created in the .NET Framework, is both deterministic and precise.