Delete table is a logged operation, so the deletion of each row gets logged in  the transaction log, which makes it slow.
Truncate table also deletes all  the rows in a table, but it won't log the deletion of each row, instead it logs  the de-allocation of the data pages of the table, which makes it faster. Of  course, truncate table cannot be rolled back.
Truncate table is  functionally identical to delete statement with no where clause both remove all  rows in the table. But truncate table is faster and uses fewer system and  transaction log resources than delete.
Truncate table removes all rows  from a table, but the table structure and its columns, constraints, indexes etc.  remains as it is.
In truncate table the counter used by an identity  column for new rows is reset to the seed for the column.
If you want to  retain the identity counter, use delete statement instead.
If you want to  remove table definition and its data, use the drop table statement.
You  cannot use truncate table on a table referenced by a foreign key constraint;  instead, use delete statement without a where clause. Because truncate table is  not logged, it cannot activate a trigger.
 
 
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