Monday 28 April 2014

The difference in TRUNCATE and DELETE

A common misconception is that they do the same thing.  Not
so.  In fact, there are many differences between the two.
DELETE is a logged operation on a per row basis.  This means
that the deletion of each row gets logged and physically deleted.
You can DELETE any row that will not violate a constraint, while leaving the foreign key or any other contraint in place.
TRUNCATE is also a logged operation, but in a different way.
TRUNCATE logs the deallocation of the data pages in which the data
exists.  The deallocation of data pages means that your data
rows still actually exist in the data pages, but the
extents have been marked as empty for reuse.  This is what
makes TRUNCATE a faster operation to perform over DELETE.
You cannot TRUNCATE a table that has any foreign key
constraints.  You will have to remove the contraints, TRUNCATE the
table, and reapply the contraints.
TRUNCATE will reset any identity columns to the default seed
value.  This means if you have a table with an identity column and
you have 264 rows with a seed value of 1, your last record will have
the value 264 (assuming you started with value 1) in its identity
columns.  After TRUNCATEing your table, when you insert a new
record into the empty table, the identity column will have a value of
1.  DELETE will not do this.  In the same scenario, if you
DELETEd your rows, when inserting a new row into the empty table, the
identity column will have a value of 265.

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