Question

I'm trying to understand the table operator APPLY.

Here is the example:

CREATE TABLE #y ( Name char(8), hoursWorked int);
GO
INSERT INTO #y VALUES ('jim',4);
INSERT INTO #y VALUES ('michael',40);
INSERT INTO #y VALUES ('raj',1000);
INSERT INTO #y VALUES ('jason',7);
INSERT INTO #y VALUES ('tim',50);
GO

CREATE TABLE #x ( Name char(8),game char(8), NumBets int);
GO
INSERT INTO #x VALUES ('jim','chess',4);
INSERT INTO #x VALUES ('jim','BG',10);
INSERT INTO #x VALUES ('jim','draughts',100);
INSERT INTO #x VALUES ('jim','football',5);
INSERT INTO #x VALUES ('michael','chess',40);
INSERT INTO #x VALUES ('michael','BG',7);
INSERT INTO #x VALUES ('michael','draughts',65);
INSERT INTO #x VALUES ('michael','football',50);
INSERT INTO #x VALUES ('raj','chess',400);
INSERT INTO #x VALUES ('raj','BG',70);
INSERT INTO #x VALUES ('raj','draughts',650);
INSERT INTO #x VALUES ('tim','draughts',60000);
GO

SELECT  y.Name, 
        y.hoursWorked,
        x.game,
        x.NumBets
FROM    #y y
        OUTER APPLY 
          (
          SELECT TOP 2 *
          FROM   #x
          WHERE  Name = y.Name 
          ORDER BY NumBets
        ) x
ORDER BY  y.Name,
        x.NumBets DESC;

My main hurdle is understanding when to use APPLY.
So I'm wondering how difficult would it be to get the same result as above using standard sql implemented in sql-server 2005 ?
Does APPLY make the query a lot shorter or more readable?
If this example shows no massive advantages to using APPLY then what is a clear example where there is an advantage to using APPLY?

Was it helpful?

Solution

First of all - with apply you could call table-valued functions where parameter values are taken from table you query, something like this:

select
    t1.col3, -- column from table
    f1.col1  -- column from function
from table1 as t1
    left outer join table2 as t2 on t2.col1 = t1.col1
    outer apply dbo.function1(t1.col1, t2.col2) as f1

or shredding xml columns

select
    t1.col3,
    t.c.value('@value', 'int') as value
from table1 as t1
    -- table1.col1 is xml iike <Data @Value="...">...</Data>
    outer apply t1.col1.nodes('Data') as t(c) 

From my expirience, apply is very useful when you have to make some precalculation:

select
    t1.col3,
    a1.col1,  --calculated value
    a2.col1   -- another calculated value, first one was used
from table1 as t1
    outer apply (select t1.col1 * 5 as col1) as a1
    outer apply (select a1.col1 - 4 as col1) as a2

another example of using apply is unpivot operation:

select
    t1.col1, c.name, c.value
from table1 as t1
    outer apply (
        select 'col1', t1.col1 union all
        select 'col2', t1.col2
    ) as c(name, value)

finally, here's your query implemented in terms of SQL 2005 without using apply:

;with cte as (
    select
        y.Name, 
        y.hoursWorked,
        x.game,
        x.NumBets,
        row_number() over(partition by x.Name order by x.NumBets) as row_num
    from y
        left outer join x on x.Name = y.Name
)
select Name, hoursWorked, game, NumBets
from cte
where row_num <= 2
order by Name, NumBets desc

see sql fiddle example

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