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Learning PostgreSQL 11

You're reading from   Learning PostgreSQL 11 A beginner's guide to building high-performance PostgreSQL database solutions

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Product type Paperback
Published in Jan 2019
Publisher
ISBN-13 9781789535464
Length 556 pages
Edition 3rd Edition
Languages
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Authors (2):
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Andrey Volkov Andrey Volkov
Author Profile Icon Andrey Volkov
Andrey Volkov
Christopher Travers Christopher Travers
Author Profile Icon Christopher Travers
Christopher Travers
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Toc

Table of Contents (18) Chapters Close

1. Relational Databases 2. PostgreSQL in Action FREE CHAPTER 3. PostgreSQL Basic Building Blocks 4. PostgreSQL Advanced Building Blocks 5. SQL Language 6. Advanced Query Writing 7. Server-Side Programming with PL/pgSQL 8. OLAP and Data Warehousing 9. Beyond Conventional Data Types 10. Transactions and Concurrency Control 11. PostgreSQL Security 12. The PostgreSQL Catalog 13. Optimizing Database Performance 14. Testing 15. Using PostgreSQL in Python Applications 16. Scalability 17. What's Next? 18. Other Books You May Enjoy

Index-only scans

Indexes have already been described in Chapter 4, PostgreSQL Advanced Building Blocks. Simply speaking, indexes work like a glossary at the end of a book. When searching for a keyword in a book, to make it faster, you can look it up in the glossary and then go to the page specified. The glossary is alphabetically organized; that's why searching in it is fast.

Moreover, when you need to find out whether a keyword is present in the book, you don't have to go to the page just looking in the glossary is enough.

PostgreSQL can do the same. If all the information that is needed for a query is contained in an index, the database won't perform the scan on the table data and will only use the index. This is called an index-only scan.

To demonstrate how it works, let's create an index for the dwh.access_log_not_partitioned table, as follows...

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