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Home 2016 February SQL Server: Difference between Temp Table and Common Table Expression (CTE)

SQL Server: Difference between Temp Table and Common Table Expression (CTE)

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In this post, I am sharing the important difference between Temp Table and Common Table Expression (CTE) of the SQL Server.
I recently wrote an article on the difference between Temp Table and Table Variable of the SQL Server.

SQL Server: Difference between Temporary Table and Table Variable

The theory and practice of Temp Table, Table Variable and CTE is one of my favourite topics of the SQL Server.

A CTE is used for a temporary result set that is defined within the execution scope of the query.
A Temp Table is also used for a temporary result set, but it can be defined for limited execution scope or can be used to define for global execution scope as a Global Temp Table.

A CTE is substituted for a view when the general use of a view is not required, and you do not have to store the definition of metadata.

CTE always uses memory and Temp Table stored in the TempDB.

The Scope of CTE is only for the query and can be referenced multiple times in other CTEs.
The child objects also access the Temp Table, and it persists until the end of the sessions.

We can not use NOLOCK and other isolation levels with CTE and with the Temp Table, we can apply it explicitly.

If we require to CTE for another batch query, it requires recreation of it.
The Temp Table can be used for all batches of a session.

A CTE doesn’t maintain any statistics and any metadata information, Temp table is maintaining a require statistics.

A CTE is a never part of the transaction and locking and its treated as system transaction.
The temp table operations are a part of user transactions.

If we have a large dataset, we should use Temp Table and with the small dataset, we can use CTE very effectively.

Feb 18, 2016Anvesh Patel
MySQL: Procedure Variable vs Session specific User Defined Variable (@variable vs variable)SQL Server: Make a System Stored Procedure for Available to all Databases
Comments: 3
  1. Derick
    February 19, 2016 at 10:01 pm

    Some genuinely fantastic info , Gladiolus I discovered this.

  2. Mathy
    June 19, 2016 at 3:54 am

    Hi Anvesh Patel,
    Very useful one. looking forward to read more articles in future.

  3. Yogesh Shinde
    December 2, 2016 at 11:22 am

    You can use WITH (NOLOCK) with CTE

Anvesh Patel
Anvesh Patel

Database Engineer

February 18, 2016 SQL ServerAnvesh Patel, Common Table Expression, cte, database, database research and development, dbrnd, SQL Query, SQL Server, SQL Server Administrator, SQL Server Monitoring, SQL Server Performance Tunning, SQL Server Tips and Tricks, Temp Table, TSQL
About Me!

I'm Anvesh Patel, a Database Engineer certified by Oracle and IBM. I'm working as a Database Architect, Database Optimizer, Database Administrator, Database Developer. Providing the best articles and solutions for different problems in the best manner through my blogs is my passion. I have more than six years of experience with various RDBMS products like MSSQL Server, PostgreSQL, MySQL, Greenplum and currently learning and doing research on BIGData and NoSQL technology. -- Hyderabad, India.

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