Which one of the following queries is faster (LIKE vs CONTAINS)?

SELECT * FROM table WHERE Column LIKE '%test%';

or

SELECT * FROM table WHERE Contains(Column, "test");

Solution 1:

The second (assuming you means CONTAINS, and actually put it in a valid query) should be faster, because it can use some form of index (in this case, a full text index). Of course, this form of query is only available if the column is in a full text index. If it isn't, then only the first form is available.

The first query, using LIKE, will be unable to use an index, since it starts with a wildcard, so will always require a full table scan.


The CONTAINS query should be:

SELECT * FROM table WHERE CONTAINS(Column, 'test');

Solution 2:

Having run both queries on a SQL Server 2012 instance, I can confirm the first query was fastest in my case.

The query with the LIKE keyword showed a clustered index scan.

The CONTAINS also had a clustered index scan with additional operators for the full text match and a merge join.

Plan

Solution 3:

I think that CONTAINS took longer and used Merge because you had a dash("-") in your query adventure-works.com.

The dash is a break word so the CONTAINS searched the full-text index for adventure and than it searched for works.com and merged the results.

Solution 4:

Also try changing from this:

    SELECT * FROM table WHERE Contains(Column, "test") > 0;

To this:

    SELECT * FROM table WHERE Contains(Column, '"*test*"') > 0;

The former will find records with values like "this is a test" and "a test-case is the plan".

The latter will also find records with values like "i am testing this" and "this is the greatest".