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JBelthoff
Posting Yak Master
173 Posts |
Posted - 2003-01-21 : 20:40:37
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Hi All,I have a table that collects information form users.I have many fields, but the identifying field is "Email".I have an autoincrement "ID" field that is a nonclustered Primary Key. I have a UNIQUE Constraint on the "Email" field.I would like to have the Email field also be a clustered index. Here is the question[s].....If the "Email" field already has a UNIQUE constraint, do I need to add a UNIQUE CLUSTERED INDEX or just a CLUSTERED INDEX?orCan I drop the UNIQUE Constraint and just use the UNIQUE CLUSTERED INDEX to achieve the same thing?Could someone expand on this please? I'm a little confused.Thanks,JB |
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harshal_in
Aged Yak Warrior
633 Posts |
Posted - 2003-01-21 : 23:18:35
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quote: If the "Email" field already has a UNIQUE constraint, do I need to add a UNIQUE CLUSTERED INDEX or just a CLUSTERED INDEX?orCan I drop the UNIQUE Constraint and just use the UNIQUE CLUSTERED INDEX to achieve the same thing?
I think you can go with the second option.But still will have to analysie the use of the table I would suggest to run the index tunning wizard if the table is that big and u have a large number of records.Expect the UnExpected |
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rihardh
Constraint Violating Yak Guru
307 Posts |
Posted - 2003-01-22 : 02:20:03
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| There's plenty on indexes and constraints in BOL. Don't mix them. Everyone of them has its own functionality which I won't explain here.Read BOL and you'll find the answer. |
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rihardh
Constraint Violating Yak Guru
307 Posts |
Posted - 2003-01-22 : 02:21:02
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| Oh, and by the way, did you notice the button on the "indexes" form wich says "Help"? |
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