Heap Storage Structure
In a heap structure, the table has no key—it is simply a heap of data. When you add a row, it is added to the end of the heap. This makes heap the fastest storage structure to use when you are initially loading tables or adding a large quantity of data.
However, when you want to retrieve a particular row from a heap table, you must search through every row in the table looking for rows that qualify. This makes heap relatively slow for retrieval if tables have more than a few pages. For more information, see the chapter “Maintaining Storage Structures.”
Note: There is a “heapsort” structure that is like heap but with the rows sorted and duplicates removed (unless NODUPLICATES is specified when the table is created). Sort order is not retained if rows are added or replaced.
Last modified date: 04/03/2024