BETWEEN
can help to avoid unnecessary reevaluation of the expression:
SELECT AVG(RAND(20091225) BETWEEN 0.2 AND 0.4)
FROM t_source;
---
0.1998
SELECT AVG(RAND(20091225) >= 0.2 AND RAND(20091225) <= 0.4)
FROM t_source;
---
0.3199
t_source
is just a dummy table with 1,000,000
records.
Of course this can be worked around using a subquery, but in MySQL
it's less efficient.
And of course, BETWEEN
is more readable. It takes 3
times to use it in a query to remember the syntax forever.
In SQL Server
and MySQL
, LIKE
against a constant with non-leading '%'
is also a shorthand for a pair of >=
and <
:
SET SHOWPLAN_TEXT ON
GO
SELECT *
FROM master
WHERE name LIKE 'string%'
GO
SET SHOWPLAN_TEXT OFF
GO
|--Index Seek(OBJECT:([test].[dbo].[master].[ix_name_desc]), SEEK:([test].[dbo].[master].[name] < 'strinH' AND [test].[dbo].[master].[name] >= 'string'), WHERE:([test].[dbo].[master].[name] like 'string%') ORDERED FORWARD)
However, LIKE
syntax is more legible.
与恶龙缠斗过久,自身亦成为恶龙;凝视深渊过久,深渊将回以凝视…