OK, I've just had situation in which Count is faster by order of magnitude on SQL server (EntityFramework 4). Here is query that thew timeout exception (on ~200.000 records):
con = db.Contacts.
Where(a => a.CompanyId == companyId && a.ContactStatusId <= (int) Const.ContactStatusEnum.Reactivated
&& !a.NewsletterLogs.Any(b => b.NewsletterLogTypeId == (int) Const.NewsletterLogTypeEnum.Unsubscr)
).OrderBy(a => a.ContactId).
Skip(position - 1).
Take(1).FirstOrDefault();
Count version executed in matter of milliseconds:
con = db.Contacts.
Where(a => a.CompanyId == companyId && a.ContactStatusId <= (int) Const.ContactStatusEnum.Reactivated
&& a.NewsletterLogs.Count(b => b.NewsletterLogTypeId == (int) Const.NewsletterLogTypeEnum.Unsubscr) == 0
).OrderBy(a => a.ContactId).
Skip(position - 1).
Take(1).FirstOrDefault();
I need to find a way to see what exact SQL both LINQs produce - but it's obvious there is a huge performance difference between Count and Any in some cases, and you can't just stick with Any in all cases.
EDIT: Here are generated SQLs. Beauties as you can see ;)
ANY:
exec sp_executesql N'SELECT TOP (1)
[Project2].[ContactId] AS [ContactId],
[Project2].[CompanyId] AS [CompanyId],
[Project2].[ContactName] AS [ContactName],
[Project2].[FullName] AS [FullName],
[Project2].[ContactStatusId] AS [ContactStatusId],
[Project2].[Created] AS [Created]
FROM ( SELECT [Project2].[ContactId] AS [ContactId], [Project2].[CompanyId] AS [CompanyId], [Project2].[ContactName] AS [ContactName], [Project2].[FullName] AS [FullName], [Project2].[ContactStatusId] AS [ContactStatusId], [Project2].[Created] AS [Created], row_number() OVER (ORDER BY [Project2].[ContactId] ASC) AS [row_number]
FROM ( SELECT
[Extent1].[ContactId] AS [ContactId],
[Extent1].[CompanyId] AS [CompanyId],
[Extent1].[ContactName] AS [ContactName],
[Extent1].[FullName] AS [FullName],
[Extent1].[ContactStatusId] AS [ContactStatusId],
[Extent1].[Created] AS [Created]
FROM [dbo].[Contact] AS [Extent1]
WHERE ([Extent1].[CompanyId] = @p__linq__0) AND ([Extent1].[ContactStatusId] <= 3) AND ( NOT EXISTS (SELECT
1 AS [C1]
FROM [dbo].[NewsletterLog] AS [Extent2]
WHERE ([Extent1].[ContactId] = [Extent2].[ContactId]) AND (6 = [Extent2].[NewsletterLogTypeId])
))
) AS [Project2]
) AS [Project2]
WHERE [Project2].[row_number] > 99
ORDER BY [Project2].[ContactId] ASC',N'@p__linq__0 int',@p__linq__0=4
COUNT:
exec sp_executesql N'SELECT TOP (1)
[Project2].[ContactId] AS [ContactId],
[Project2].[CompanyId] AS [CompanyId],
[Project2].[ContactName] AS [ContactName],
[Project2].[FullName] AS [FullName],
[Project2].[ContactStatusId] AS [ContactStatusId],
[Project2].[Created] AS [Created]
FROM ( SELECT [Project2].[ContactId] AS [ContactId], [Project2].[CompanyId] AS [CompanyId], [Project2].[ContactName] AS [ContactName], [Project2].[FullName] AS [FullName], [Project2].[ContactStatusId] AS [ContactStatusId], [Project2].[Created] AS [Created], row_number() OVER (ORDER BY [Project2].[ContactId] ASC) AS [row_number]
FROM ( SELECT
[Project1].[ContactId] AS [ContactId],
[Project1].[CompanyId] AS [CompanyId],
[Project1].[ContactName] AS [ContactName],
[Project1].[FullName] AS [FullName],
[Project1].[ContactStatusId] AS [ContactStatusId],
[Project1].[Created] AS [Created]
FROM ( SELECT
[Extent1].[ContactId] AS [ContactId],
[Extent1].[CompanyId] AS [CompanyId],
[Extent1].[ContactName] AS [ContactName],
[Extent1].[FullName] AS [FullName],
[Extent1].[ContactStatusId] AS [ContactStatusId],
[Extent1].[Created] AS [Created],
(SELECT
COUNT(1) AS [A1]
FROM [dbo].[NewsletterLog] AS [Extent2]
WHERE ([Extent1].[ContactId] = [Extent2].[ContactId]) AND (6 = [Extent2].[NewsletterLogTypeId])) AS [C1]
FROM [dbo].[Contact] AS [Extent1]
) AS [Project1]
WHERE ([Project1].[CompanyId] = @p__linq__0) AND ([Project1].[ContactStatusId] <= 3) AND (0 = [Project1].[C1])
) AS [Project2]
) AS [Project2]
WHERE [Project2].[row_number] > 99
ORDER BY [Project2].[ContactId] ASC',N'@p__linq__0 int',@p__linq__0=4
Seems that pure Where with EXISTS works much worse than calculating Count and then doing Where with Count == 0.
Let me know if you guys see some error in my findings. What can be taken out of all this regardless of Any vs Count discussion is that any more complex LINQ is way better off when rewritten as Stored Procedure ;).