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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: June 10, 20262026-06-10T23:56:23+00:00 2026-06-10T23:56:23+00:00

I’m creating an SQL Server 2008 database that may contain millions of records and

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I’m creating an SQL Server 2008 database that may contain millions of records and I was wondering if I need to define the following as indexes:

  1. TINYINT column that may contain only 0 and 1?

  2. TINYINT column that may contain only: 0, 5, and 6?

PS. Both of these columns will be used in the WHERE clause for selection.

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-06-10T23:56:24+00:00Added an answer on June 10, 2026 at 11:56 pm

    No, an index on these columns alone basically will never be used.

    But such low selectivity keys make great candidates for composite keys, placed as the leftmost column in the index. Eg.say the TINYINT (0,1) (why not use bit btw?) is the deleted column. You have frequent queries that predicate with WHERE deleted=0 AND .... Adding this as the leftmost column in the clustered index very often the proper approach. Or if the predicate is, say, WHERE name = '...' AND deleted=0 you should make a non-clustered index on (deleted, name).

    Another option is to use a filtered index: create index .. on (name) where (deleted=0) but this does not cover the case where you are interested in the deleted=1.

    Same goes for a column with few distinct values like, say, a type column. Again, making it the leftmost key in composite indexes usually makes a lot of sense.

    Note though that if you add a low selectivity key as the leftmost key in an index and you do not specify this column in the predicate (eg. WHERE name='...' w/o adding any criteria for deleted) then the index cannot be used, only an index on (name) (or on (name, ...)) could be used, ie. where name is the leftmost key.

    Why not make it righmost key? eg. index on (name, deleted)? Because there’s usually no benefit, only if you want to enforce an unique constraint. With only 0 or 1 to choose from an index on (name) or an index on (name, deleted) basically offer the same performance (if they can be used). Placing the low selectivity key to the left enables some range scan scenarios (eg. WHERE type=5).

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