SQL Error: "Must declare the scalar variable" when passing a table parameter to a table-valued function - sql

The following simple SQL example is returning an error.
Here's a table type that's passed to a table-valued function:
CREATE TYPE Ids
AS TABLE
(
Id int NOT NULL,
PRIMARY KEY( Id )
);
GO
And here is the table-valued function that fails:
CREATE FUNCTION GetIds
(
#ids -- or null
Ids READONLY
)
RETURNS
#result
TABLE
(
EachId int
)
AS
BEGIN
IF #ids IS NOT NULL
INSERT INTO #result
SELECT Id
FROM #ids;
RETURN;
END;
GO
The error returned is:
Msg 137, Level 16, State 1, Procedure GetIds, Line 28
Must declare the scalar variable "#ids".
I've read posts that say that it happens when the SQL compatibility level is too old, but the following returns 100:
SELECT compatibility_level
FROM sys.databases
WHERE name = 'TheDatabaseName';
Any suggestions would be greatly appreciated.

Let me tell you table type parameter is just like a data table.
So, if you want to put if condition on it then,
just change your if condition of function as below:
IF (select count(*) from #ids) > 0
Complete function code is:
CREATE FUNCTION GetIds
(
#ids Ids READONLY
)
RETURNS #result TABLE(EachId int)
AS
BEGIN
IF (select count(*) from #ids) > 0
INSERT INTO #result
SELECT Id FROM #ids;
RETURN;
END;

just check if you have any record in you table
if(select count(1) from #ids)>0

Related

Create recursive scalar function in SQL

I need a recursive scalar function in SQL Server 2014.
My code is this:
CREATE FUNCTION Accounting_ToppestLevelID
(
#ID numeric(6,0)
)
RETURNS numeric(6,0)
AS
BEGIN
declare #temp numeric(6,0)
select #temp = a.ParentID from Accounting_AcntAccount a where a.ID = #ID
if #temp is null
begin
return #ID
end
return Accounting_ToppestLevelID(#temp)
END
But after executing the code below error will appearance:
Msg 195, Level 15, State 10, Procedure Accounting_ToppestLevelID, Line 34
'Accounting_ToppestLevelID' is not a recognized built-in function name.
It is a logical error but how I can fix it?
Try adding the schema prefix, ie.
return dbo.Accounting_ToppestLevelID(#temp)
You should simply specify function's full name: it is implicitly created in dbo
schema if no schema is specified, so your script should be:
CREATE FUNCTION Accounting_ToppestLevelID
(
#ID numeric(6,0)
)
RETURNS numeric(6,0)
AS
BEGIN
declare #temp numeric(6,0)
select #temp = a.ParentID from Accounting_AcntAccount a where a.ID = #ID
if #temp is null
begin
return #ID
end
return dbo.Accounting_ToppestLevelID(#temp)
END
Try adding a schema explicitly. If you don't use a custom one, default is dbo:
return [dbo].[Accounting_ToppestLevelID](#temp);

SQL Server: CREATE FUNCTION with declare variables inside

I would like to create a function in SQL Server.
In this function, I need to define some variables and then use it in the SELECT.
SQL looks like below:
CREATE FUNCTION [dbo].[MyFussnction]
(
#path [nvarchar](10)
)
RETURNS TABLE
BEGIN
DECLARE #xx varchar(50);
SET #xx = 'Windows%';
RETURN
SELECT * FROM MyTable WHERE DataPath LIKE #path AND XX LIKE #xx;
END
But, it is not able to be created and the error says:
Msg 102, Level 15, State 31, Procedure MyFussnction, Line 12 [Batch Start Line 0]
Incorrect syntax near 'BEGIN'.
You need to define columns of table to return, then you can use declare, something like below
CREATE FUNCTION [dbo].[MyFussnction] (
#path [nvarchar](10)
)
RETURNS #Mytable TABLE
(
ID int PRIMARY KEY NOT NULL
-- define other columns
)
AS
BEGIN
DECLARE #xx varchar(50);
SET #xx = 'Windows%';
Insert into #Mytable
SELECT Id FROM MyTable WHERE DataPath LIKE #path AND XX LIKE #xx;
RETURN;
END

How to create new table within function in sql

I created one function, That function return the table values like below
CREATE FUNCTION dbo.splitText(#strArgs VARCHAR(4000))
RETURNS #tab TABLE
(
[Key] VARCHAR(255) NOT NULL,
Value VARCHAR(4000) NOT NULL
)
AS
BEGIN
INSERT INTO #tab VALUES('Key1', 'Value1')
INSERT INTO #tab VALUES('Key2', 'Value2')
RETURN
END
GO
OUtput:
Key Value
*************
Key1 Value1
Key2 Value2
The second function i need,is to return the table values from the above fuction.
CREATE FUNCTION dbo.TableValuedParameterExample11()
RETURNS #TmpTable1 table (Value VARCHAR(4000) NOT NULL)
AS
BEGIN
DECLARE #StateDescp VARCHAR(250)
Select * into TmpTable1 from (Select value from dbo.Splittext('Test')) aa
RETURN
END
GO
after finishing the functions,i am running the below query.
Select * from TmpTable1.
Output i need
Value
********
Value1
Value2
I need this out put.
But I got error
Invalid use of a side-effecting operator 'SELECT INTO' within a function.
When you write select * into [table]... you must be sure the [table] doesnot exist. use insert into [table] select ... instead. also, you need a # when you deal with variable or function table:
CREATE FUNCTION dbo.TableValuedParameterExample11()
RETURNS #TmpTable1 table (Value VARCHAR(4000) NOT NULL)
AS
BEGIN
DECLARE #StateDescp VARCHAR(250)
INSERT INTO
#TmpTable1([Value])
SELECT
value
FROM
dbo.SplitArgs('Test')) aa
RETURN
END
GO

How do I create a function to accept [[customerID]] and return CustName Please look at details

I have been asked to created a Function to accept CustomerID and return CustomerName for the CustomerID, I m a new Student/Developer Please if the question is not clear let me know so i can add more details about it, but that is what I was exactly asked.
functions in SQL are of three types.ignoring rest CLR functions ...
create table test
(
id int,
name varchar(4)
)
insert into test
select 1,'abc'
union all
select 2,'cde'
1.Scalar function takes one value and return one value
now for the above table ,you can create scalar function like below
create function dbo.test
(
#id int
)
returns varchar(4)
as
begin
declare #name varchar(4)
select #name=name from test where id =#id
return #name
End
You invoke it like:
select dbo.test(1)
2.Inline table valued functions:takes a single input same like scalar functions and returns table
create function dbo.test
(
#id int
)
as
returns TABLE
(
select * from test where id=#id)
You invoke it like:
select * from dbo.test(1)
3.Multi table valued function:
create function dbo.test
(
#id int
)
returns
#test table
(
id int,
name varchar(4)
)
as
begin
insert into #test
select * from test where id =#id
return
end
You invoke it like:
select * from dbo.test(1)
Take any one of Itzik Ben Gan books and start learning SQL the way it should be learned

Pass table as parameter into sql server UDF

I'd like to pass a table as a parameter into a scaler UDF.
I'd also prefer to restrict the parameter to tables with only one column. (optional)
Is this possible?
EDIT
I don't want to pass a table name, I'd like to pass the table of data (as a reference I presume)
EDIT
I would want my Scaler UDF to basically take a table of values and return a CSV list of the rows.
IE
col1
"My First Value"
"My Second Value"
...
"My nth Value"
would return
"My First Value, My Second Value,... My nth Value"
I'd like to do some filtering on the table though, IE ensuring that there are no nulls and to ensure there are no duplicates. I was expecting something along the lines of:
SELECT dbo.MyFunction(SELECT DISTINCT myDate FROM myTable WHERE myDate IS NOT NULL)
You can, however no any table. From documentation:
For Transact-SQL functions, all data
types, including CLR user-defined
types and user-defined table types,
are allowed except the timestamp data
type.
You can use user-defined table types.
Example of user-defined table type:
CREATE TYPE TableType
AS TABLE (LocationName VARCHAR(50))
GO
DECLARE #myTable TableType
INSERT INTO #myTable(LocationName) VALUES('aaa')
SELECT * FROM #myTable
So what you can do is to define your table type, for example TableType and define the function which takes the parameter of this type. An example function:
CREATE FUNCTION Example( #TableName TableType READONLY)
RETURNS VARCHAR(50)
AS
BEGIN
DECLARE #name VARCHAR(50)
SELECT TOP 1 #name = LocationName FROM #TableName
RETURN #name
END
The parameter has to be READONLY. And example usage:
DECLARE #myTable TableType
INSERT INTO #myTable(LocationName) VALUES('aaa')
SELECT * FROM #myTable
SELECT dbo.Example(#myTable)
Depending on what you want achieve you can modify this code.
EDIT:
If you have a data in a table you may create a variable:
DECLARE #myTable TableType
And take data from your table to the variable
INSERT INTO #myTable(field_name)
SELECT field_name_2 FROM my_other_table
Unfortunately, there is no simple way in SQL Server 2005. Lukasz' answer is correct for SQL Server 2008 though and the feature is long overdue
Any solution would involve temp tables, or passing in xml/CSV and parsing in the UDF. Example: change to xml, parse in udf
DECLARE #psuedotable xml
SELECT
#psuedotable = ...
FROM
...
FOR XML ...
SELECT ... dbo.MyUDF (#psuedotable)
What do you want to do in the bigger picture though? There may be another way to do this...
Edit: Why not pass in the query as a string and use a stored proc with output parameter
Note: this is an untested bit of code, and you'd need to think about SQL injection etc. However, it also satisfies your "one column" requirement and should help you along
CREATE PROC dbo.ToCSV (
#MyQuery varchar(2000),
#CSVOut varchar(max)
)
AS
SET NOCOUNT ON
CREATE TABLE #foo (bar varchar(max))
INSERT #foo
EXEC (#MyQuery)
SELECT
#CSVOut = SUBSTRING(buzz, 2, 2000000000)
FROM
(
SELECT
bar -- maybe CAST(bar AS varchar(max))??
FROM
#foo
FOR XML PATH (',')
) fizz(buzz)
GO
Step 1: Create a Type as Table with name TableType that will accept a table having one varchar column
create type TableType
as table ([value] varchar(100) null)
Step 2: Create a function that will accept above declared TableType as Table-Valued Parameter and String Value as Separator
create function dbo.fn_get_string_with_delimeter (#table TableType readonly,#Separator varchar(5))
returns varchar(500)
As
begin
declare #return varchar(500)
set #return = stuff((select #Separator + value from #table for xml path('')),1,1,'')
return #return
end
Step 3: Pass table with one varchar column to the user-defined type TableType and ',' as separator in the function
select dbo.fn_get_string_with_delimeter(#tab, ',')
Cutting to the bottom line, you want a query like SELECT x FROM y to be passed into a function that returns the values as a comma separated string.
As has already been explained you can do this by creating a table type and passing a UDT into the function, but this needs a multi-line statement.
You can pass XML around without declaring a typed table, but this seems to need a xml variable which is still a multi-line statement i.e.
DECLARE #MyXML XML = (SELECT x FROM y FOR XML RAW);
SELECT Dbo.CreateCSV(#MyXml);
The "FOR XML RAW" makes the SQL give you it's result set as some xml.
But you can bypass the variable using Cast(... AS XML). Then it's just a matter of some XQuery and a little concatenation trick:
CREATE FUNCTION CreateCSV (#MyXML XML)
RETURNS VARCHAR(MAX)
BEGIN
DECLARE #listStr VARCHAR(MAX);
SELECT
#listStr =
COALESCE(#listStr+',' ,'') +
c.value('#Value[1]','nvarchar(max)')
FROM #myxml.nodes('/row') as T(c)
RETURN #listStr
END
GO
-- And you call it like this:
SELECT Dbo.CreateCSV(CAST(( SELECT x FROM y FOR XML RAW) AS XML));
-- Or a working example
SELECT Dbo.CreateCSV(CAST((
SELECT DISTINCT number AS Value
FROM master..spt_values
WHERE type = 'P'
AND number <= 20
FOR XML RAW) AS XML));
As long as you use FOR XML RAW all you need do is alias the column you want as Value, as this is hard coded in the function.
PASSING TABLE AS PARAMETER IN STORED PROCEDURE
Step 1:
CREATE TABLE [DBO].T_EMPLOYEES_DETAILS
(
Id int,
Name nvarchar(50),
Gender nvarchar(10),
Salary int
)
Step 2:
CREATE TYPE EmpInsertType AS TABLE
(
Id int,
Name nvarchar(50),
Gender nvarchar(10),
Salary int
)
Step 3:
/* Must add READONLY keyword at end of the variable */
CREATE PROC PRC_EmpInsertType
#EmployeeInsertType EmpInsertType READONLY
AS
BEGIN
INSERT INTO [DBO].T_EMPLOYEES_DETAILS
SELECT * FROM #EmployeeInsertType
END
Step 4:
DECLARE #EmployeeInsertType EmpInsertType
INSERT INTO #EmployeeInsertType VALUES(1,'John','Male',50000)
INSERT INTO #EmployeeInsertType VALUES(2,'Praveen','Male',60000)
INSERT INTO #EmployeeInsertType VALUES(3,'Chitra','Female',45000)
INSERT INTO #EmployeeInsertType VALUES(4,'Mathy','Female',6600)
INSERT INTO #EmployeeInsertType VALUES(5,'Sam','Male',50000)
EXEC PRC_EmpInsertType #EmployeeInsertType
=======================================
SELECT * FROM T_EMPLOYEES_DETAILS
OUTPUT
1 John Male 50000
2 Praveen Male 60000
3 Chitra Female 45000
4 Mathy Female 6600
5 Sam Male 50000
I've been dealing with a very similar problem and have been able to achieve what I was looking for, even though I'm using SQL Server 2000. I know it is an old question, but think its valid to post here the solution since there should be others like me that use old versions and still need help.
Here's the trick: SQL Server won't accept passing a table to a UDF, nor you can pass a T-SQL query so the function creates a temp table or even calls a stored procedure to do that. So, instead, I've created a reserved table, which I called xtList. This will hold the list of values (1 column, as needed) to work with.
CREATE TABLE [dbo].[xtList](
[List] [varchar](1000) NULL
) ON [PRIMARY]
Then, a stored procedure to populate the list. This is not strictly necessary, but I think is very usefull and best practice.
-- =============================================
-- Author: Zark Khullah
-- Create date: 20/06/2014
-- =============================================
CREATE PROCEDURE [dbo].[xpCreateList]
#ListQuery varchar(2000)
AS
BEGIN
SET NOCOUNT ON;
DELETE FROM xtList
INSERT INTO xtList
EXEC(#ListQuery)
END
Now, just deal with the list in any way you want, using the xtList. You can use in a procedure (for executing several T-SQL commands), scalar functions (for retrieving several strings) or multi-statement table-valued functions (retrieves the strings but like it was inside a table, 1 string per row). For any of that, you'll need cursors:
DECLARE #Item varchar(100)
DECLARE cList CURSOR DYNAMIC
FOR (SELECT * FROM xtList WHERE List is not NULL)
OPEN cList
FETCH FIRST FROM cList INTO #Item
WHILE ##FETCH_STATUS = 0 BEGIN
<< desired action with values >>
FETCH NEXT FROM cList INTO #Item
END
CLOSE cList
DEALLOCATE cList
The desired action would be as follows, depending on which type of object created:
Stored procedures
-- =============================================
-- Author: Zark Khullah
-- Create date: 20/06/2014
-- =============================================
CREATE PROCEDURE [dbo].[xpProcreateExec]
(
#Cmd varchar(8000),
#ReplaceWith varchar(1000)
)
AS
BEGIN
DECLARE #Query varchar(8000)
<< cursor start >>
SET #Query = REPLACE(#Cmd,#ReplaceWith,#Item)
EXEC(#Query)
<< cursor end >>
END
/* EXAMPLES
(List A,B,C)
Query = 'SELECT x FROM table'
with EXEC xpProcreateExec(Query,'x') turns into
SELECT A FROM table
SELECT B FROM table
SELECT C FROM table
Cmd = 'EXEC procedure ''arg''' --whatchout for wrong quotes, since it executes as dynamic SQL
with EXEC xpProcreateExec(Cmd,'arg') turns into
EXEC procedure 'A'
EXEC procedure 'B'
EXEC procedure 'C'
*/
Scalar functions
-- =============================================
-- Author: Zark Khullah
-- Create date: 20/06/2014
-- =============================================
CREATE FUNCTION [dbo].[xfProcreateStr]
(
#OriginalText varchar(8000),
#ReplaceWith varchar(1000)
)
RETURNS varchar(8000)
AS
BEGIN
DECLARE #Result varchar(8000)
SET #Result = ''
<< cursor start >>
SET #Result = #Result + REPLACE(#OriginalText,#ReplaceWith,#Item) + char(13) + char(10)
<< cursor end >>
RETURN #Result
END
/* EXAMPLE
(List A,B,C)
Text = 'Access provided for user x'
with "SELECT dbo.xfProcreateStr(Text,'x')" turns into
'Access provided for user A
Access provided for user B
Access provided for user C'
*/
Multi-statement table-valued functions
-- =============================================
-- Author: Zark Khullah
-- Create date: 20/06/2014
-- =============================================
CREATE FUNCTION [dbo].[xfProcreateInRows]
(
#OriginalText varchar(8000),
#ReplaceWith varchar(1000)
)
RETURNS
#Texts TABLE
(
Text varchar(2000)
)
AS
BEGIN
<< cursor start >>
INSERT INTO #Texts VALUES(REPLACE(#OriginalText,#ReplaceWith,#Item))
<< cursor end >>
END
/* EXAMPLE
(List A,B,C)
Text = 'Access provided for user x'
with "SELECT * FROM dbo.xfProcreateInRow(Text,'x')" returns rows
'Access provided for user A'
'Access provided for user B'
'Access provided for user C'
*/
To obtain the column count on a table, use this:
select count(id) from syscolumns where id = object_id('tablename')
and to pass a table to a function, try XML as show here:
create function dbo.ReadXml (#xmlMatrix xml)
returns table
as
return
( select
t.value('./#Salary', 'integer') as Salary,
t.value('./#Age', 'integer') as Age
from #xmlMatrix.nodes('//row') x(t)
)
go
declare #source table
( Salary integer,
age tinyint
)
insert into #source
select 10000, 25 union all
select 15000, 27 union all
select 12000, 18 union all
select 15000, 36 union all
select 16000, 57 union all
select 17000, 44 union all
select 18000, 32 union all
select 19000, 56 union all
select 25000, 34 union all
select 7500, 29
--select * from #source
declare #functionArgument xml
select #functionArgument =
( select
Salary as [row/#Salary],
Age as [row/#Age]
from #source
for xml path('')
)
--select #functionArgument as [#functionArgument]
select * from readXml(#functionArgument)
/* -------- Sample Output: --------
Salary Age
----------- -----------
10000 25
15000 27
12000 18
15000 36
16000 57
17000 44
18000 32
19000 56
25000 34
7500 29
*/
create table Project (ProjectId int, Description varchar(50));
insert into Project values (1, 'Chase tail, change directions');
insert into Project values (2, 'ping-pong ball in clothes dryer');
create table ProjectResource (ProjectId int, ResourceId int, Name varchar(15));
insert into ProjectResource values (1, 1, 'Adam');
insert into ProjectResource values (1, 2, 'Kerry');
insert into ProjectResource values (1, 3, 'Tom');
insert into ProjectResource values (2, 4, 'David');
insert into ProjectResource values (2, 5, 'Jeff');
SELECT *,
(SELECT Name + ' ' AS [text()]
FROM ProjectResource pr
WHERE pr.ProjectId = p.ProjectId
FOR XML PATH (''))
AS ResourceList
FROM Project p
-- ProjectId Description ResourceList
-- 1 Chase tail, change directions Adam Kerry Tom
-- 2 ping-pong ball in clothes dryer David Jeff
The following will enable you to quickly remove the duplicate,null values and return only the valid one as list.
CREATE TABLE DuplicateTable (Col1 INT)
INSERT INTO DuplicateTable
SELECT 8
UNION ALL
SELECT 1--duplicate
UNION ALL
SELECT 2 --duplicate
UNION ALL
SELECT 1
UNION ALL
SELECT 3
UNION ALL
SELECT 4
UNION ALL
SELECT 5
UNION
SELECT NULL
GO
WITH CTE (COl1,DuplicateCount)
AS
(
SELECT COl1,
ROW_NUMBER() OVER(PARTITION BY COl1 ORDER BY Col1) AS DuplicateCount
FROM DuplicateTable
WHERE (col1 IS NOT NULL)
)
SELECT COl1
FROM CTE
WHERE DuplicateCount =1
GO
CTE are valid in SQL 2005 , you could then store the values in a temp table and use it with your function.
you can do something like this
/* CREATE USER DEFINED TABLE TYPE */
CREATE TYPE StateMaster AS TABLE
(
StateCode VARCHAR(2),
StateDescp VARCHAR(250)
)
GO
/*CREATE FUNCTION WHICH TAKES TABLE AS A PARAMETER */
CREATE FUNCTION TableValuedParameterExample(#TmpTable StateMaster READONLY)
RETURNS VARCHAR(250)
AS
BEGIN
DECLARE #StateDescp VARCHAR(250)
SELECT #StateDescp = StateDescp FROM #TmpTable
RETURN #StateDescp
END
GO
/*CREATE STORED PROCEDURE WHICH TAKES TABLE AS A PARAMETER */
CREATE PROCEDURE TableValuedParameterExample_SP
(
#TmpTable StateMaster READONLY
)
AS
BEGIN
INSERT INTO StateMst
SELECT * FROM #TmpTable
END
GO
BEGIN
/* DECLARE VARIABLE OF TABLE USER DEFINED TYPE */
DECLARE #MyTable StateMaster
/* INSERT DATA INTO TABLE TYPE */
INSERT INTO #MyTable VALUES('11','AndhraPradesh')
INSERT INTO #MyTable VALUES('12','Assam')
/* EXECUTE STORED PROCEDURE */
EXEC TableValuedParameterExample_SP #MyTable
GO
For more details check this link: http://sailajareddy-technical.blogspot.in/2012/09/passing-table-valued-parameter-to.html