‎2006 Oct 11 2:23 PM
Hi Gyes,
What is the difference between <b>Select Single</b> and <b>Select Upto 1 Row</b>.
‎2006 Oct 11 2:25 PM
‎2006 Oct 11 2:26 PM
hi
We are using select single if u have all primary keys. then it is very for good for performance. Otherwise we willuse select upto one row.
Regards.
Kiran
‎2006 Oct 11 2:28 PM
‎2006 Oct 11 2:58 PM
Hi,
select single aand select upto 1 rows return 1 rows
but select single is used when we have all keys
in where clause
select matnr from marc where matnr = p_matnr
and werks = p_werks.
else
select upto 1 row is used if we dont have all keys
in where clause
select matnr from marc upto 1 rows where matnr =
p_matnr
endselect.
performance wise select single is optimum.
Regards,
Amole
‎2006 Oct 11 3:05 PM
hi suresh,
chk this.
ex code
***********
Report Z_Difference
Message-id 38
Line-Size 80
Line-Count 0
No Standard Page Heading.
Start-Of-Selection.
Data: w_Single type Posnr,
t_Rows type standard table of Posnr
initial size 0
with header line.
Select single Posnr
from zDifference
into w_Single.
Select Posnr
into table t_Rows
from zDifference
up to 1 rows
order by Posnr descending.
Write 😕 'Select single:', w_Single.
Skip 1.
Write 😕 'Up to 1 rows :'.
Loop at t_Rows.
Write t_Rows.
EndLoop.
*******************************************
According to SAP Performance course the SELECT UP TO 1 ROWS is faster than SELECT SINGLE because you are not
using all the primary key fields.
select single is a construct designed to read database records with primary key. In the absence of the primary key,
it might end up doing a sequential search, whereas the select up to 1 rows may assume that there is no primary key
supplied and will try to find most suitable index.
The best way to find out is through sql trace or runtime analysis.
Use "select up to 1 rows" only if you are sure that all the records returned will have the same value for the field(s)
you are interested in. If not, you will be reading only the first record which matches the criteria, but may be the
second or the third record has the value you are looking for.
The System test result showed that the variant Single * takes less time than Up to 1 rows as there is an additional
level for COUNT STOP KEY for SELECT ENDSELECT UP TO 1 ROWS.
The 'SELECT SINGLE' statement selects the first row in the database that it finds that fulfils the 'WHERE' clause
If this results in multiple records then only the first one will be returned and therefore may not be unique.
Mainly: to read data from
The 'SELECT .... UP TO 1 ROWS' statement is subtly different. The database selects all of the relevant records that
are defined by the WHERE clause, applies any aggregate, ordering or grouping functions to them and then returns
the first record of the result set.
Mainly: to check if entries exist.
You can refer to the below link..
http://www.sap-img.com/abap/difference-between-select-single-and-select-upto-one-rows.htm
rgds
anver
pls mark points if helpful
‎2006 Oct 11 3:41 PM
Hi suresh,
select single and select upto 1 rows are having their roles.
if u r retrieving the data using primary key then go for select single and give the entire primary key information.
If u r retrieving the data without primary key then go for select upto 1 rows will be a better option.
For select single u dont have to use endselect,but for upto 1 rows u should use endselect.
for example..
select single matnr from mara into v_mara
where = ;;;.
select matnr from mara into v_mara
upto 1 rows where =;;;
endselect.
Regards,
Nagaraj