That depends on the data and on the pattern. If you use like 'a%', then Oracle can use a BTree indexes to look up the matches because it can search the btree with the start of the pattern and then consider only the subtree.
This doesn't work for LIKE '%a' but you can work around this by creating a calculated column which reverses all values from the column you want to search (so you get the pattern above).
If you use hashed indexes, there is little that Oracle can do but scan the whole index. It might sill be faster when there are only few different values.
I'm not sure whether INSTR can ever use an index because it has no fixed anchor.
So like with all performance questions:
Fill the database with some realistic test data and run some tests.
Always write your code in a way that it can be optimized easily later, when you know about the bottlenecks
Never guess what might be slow. You'll be wrong 90% of the time. Always measure.
That depends on the data and on the pattern. If you use
like 'a%'
, then Oracle can use a BTree indexes to look up the matches because it can search the btree with the start of the pattern and then consider only the subtree.This doesn't work for
LIKE '%a'
but you can work around this by creating a calculated column which reverses all values from the column you want to search (so you get the pattern above).If you use hashed indexes, there is little that Oracle can do but scan the whole index. It might sill be faster when there are only few different values.
I'm not sure whether
INSTR
can ever use an index because it has no fixed anchor.So like with all performance questions:
INSTR is a oracle function since Oracle 8i for finding a substring, and LIKE is an SQL condition mainly used for matching string with wildcards.
I expect INSTR to be a bit faster since it's less complex but I didn't measure it.
Neither will be "faster" consistently because they aren't comparable: it depends what you need to do, your data, how you search etc
This page says that
INSTR
is faster:http://oracle.veryoo.com/2013/03/performance-comparation-between-like.html
EDIT: Archive link since the above is no longer available: http://web.archive.org/web/20160301212009/http://oracle.veryoo.com/2013/03/performance-comparation-between-like.html
Also on SO for MySql this answer says that INSTR is faster.