There is already an object named 'tbltable1' in the database - sql

I am trying to insert data from one table to another with same structure,
select * into tbltable1 from tbltable1_Link
I am getting the following error message:
There is already an object named 'tbltable1' in the database.

The SELECT INTO statement creates a new table of the name you provide and populates it with the results of the SELECT statement.
I think you should be using INSERT INTO since the table already exists. If your purpose is in fact to populate a temporary table, then you should provide a table name that does not already exist in the database.
See MSDN for more information on this.

If you are confident that tbltable1 is not required, you can drop the table first.
You may also want to consider using temporary tables...
Select * into ##MyTemporaryTable FROM tblTable1_Link
You can then use the temporary table in this session. (Ending the session should drop the temporary table automatically, if I remember correctly. It's been a while since I've worked with SQL Server).

Related

Retrieve Script used in "Create Table As" Statement

We have a table in our Oracle Database that was created from an actual script.
Ex:
Create Table AS (Select * from table).
I was hoping to recover the original script the table was created from as the data is quite old in the table, but needs this created table needs to be refreshed. This table is created with data from another live table in our database, so if there is a way to refresh this without the original query - I'm open ears. Any solutions are welcomed!
Thanks!
I suppose you could also do a column by column comparison of this table against all others to see which one (if any) matches it. Of course, this would only be a guess.
It would require that object to actually be a materialized view instead of a table. Otherwise you are probably left off with exploring logs. Beyond that I doubt there is any way to recover the original select statement used to create that table.

Deleting objects from SQL Server

In SQL Server Database Engine I have a table named Table A.
I deleted the table using graphical interface, but when I wanted to create a table with same name, the error shows
The object already exists
What is the remedy of this situation?
The following steps should help you track down what is going on and help you create your table:
Right-click on your database and select refresh
Verify that your table does not exist under this database.
If you table is
not shown here, then very likely your table is displayed under the
master database.
To create a table in your selected database,
first select the database and then run your query.
A better
option for number 4, just to be sure you are specifying the correct
database is to run the command use dbname; (where dbname is
the name of your database). Do this on the line above your create table code.

SQL old table still appearing

This is a really strange question. I have a dynamic SQL stored procedure that inserts data into a static table in the queried database. This table is referenced quite a lot in the query. So when I needed to change this table and add two new columns I deleted it and used the import wizard (Excel spread sheet) to create a new one and gave it that same name, so I didn't have to amend the SP. The SP works fine, however I also have this query outside of dynamic SQL and when I run it, it now fails.
At first I couldn't work out why but when I saw that it was failing on the INSERT INTO the newly created (but with the same name) table because there were too many columns to match the table. I ran a simple SELECT * FROM and it brought back the old table with the 3 columns it used to have and not the new table with 5 columns?
How can this table still exist if its been deleted? Its like a ghost table still remains?
Thanks
First check your temp table exists or not in your database.IF exists means drop your temp table and then create new one.
IF EXISTS(SELECT 1 FROM tempdb.dbo.sysobjects WHERE xtype in ('U') AND id =
object_id(N'tempdb..#your_tableName') )
DROP TABLE #your_tableName;
This is known behaviour with views and can be fixed by dropping and recreating the view. Not sure why it is acting the same way for a table. Possibilities I can think of -
It is a view
The new table was not created in the same database
Try dropping and recreating the sproc, for what it is worth

create table using exsiting table update/link to column

I want to create a new table with one of the columns linked/updated by a table on another database (but on the same server).
so when table A column is updated it will automatically update table b's column with the same information no data will be entered into this column from table b.
I have tried various different ways but can't find a way to do this with out updating column manually or setting up a server agent any help would be great.
if you want to make cross server query, please check sp_addlinkedserver
https://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/ms190479.aspx
Once it is linked, just create a trigger, where you can use
select * from [server].[database].[schema].[table]

SQL: Insert all records from one table to another table without specific the columns

I want to insert all the record from the back up table foo_bk into foo table without specific the columns.
if i try this query
INSERT INTO foo
SELECT *
FROM foo_bk
i'll get error "Insert Error: Column name or number of supplied values does not match table definition."
Is it possible to do bulk insert from one table to another without supply the column name?
I've google it but can't seem to find an answer. all the answer require specific the columns.
You should not ever want to do this. Select * should not be used as the basis for an insert as the columns may get moved around and break your insert (or worse not break your insert but mess up your data. Suppose someone adds a column to the table in the select but not the other table, you code will break. Or suppose someone, for reasons that surpass understanding but frequently happen, decides to do a drop and recreate on a table and move the columns around to a different order. Now your last_name is is the place first_name was in originally and select * will put it in the wrong column in the other table. It is an extremely poor practice to fail to specify columns and the specific mapping of one column to the column you want in the table you are interested in.
Right now you may have several problems, first the two structures don't match directly or second the table being inserted to has an identity column and so even though the insertable columns are a direct match, the table being inserted to has one more column than the other and by not specifying the database assumes you are going to try to insert to that column. Or you might have the same number of columns but one is an identity and thus can't be inserted into (although I think that would be a different error message).
Per this other post: Insert all values of a..., you can do the following:
INSERT INTO new_table (Foo, Bar, Fizz, Buzz)
SELECT Foo, Bar, Fizz, Buzz
FROM initial_table
It's important to specify the column names as indicated by the other answers.
Use this
SELECT *
INTO new_table_name
FROM current_table_name
You need to have at least the same number of columns and each column has to be defined in exactly the same way, i.e. a varchar column can't be inserted into an int column.
For bulk transfer, check the documentation for the SQL implementation you're using. There are often tools available to bulk transfer data from one table to another. For SqlServer 2005, for example, you could use the SQL Server Import and Export Wizard. Right-click on the database you're trying to move data around in and click Export to access it.
SQL 2008 allows you to forgo specifying column names in your SELECT if you use SELECT INTO rather than INSERT INTO / SELECT:
SELECT *
INTO Foo
FROM Bar
WHERE x=y
The INTO clause does exist in SQL Server 2000-2005, but still requires specifying column names. 2008 appears to add the ability to use SELECT *.
See the MSDN articles on INTO (SQL2005), (SQL2008) for details.
The INTO clause only works if the destination table does not yet exist, however. If you're looking to add records to an existing table, this won't help.
All the answers above, for some reason or another, did not work for me on SQL Server 2012. My situation was I accidently deleted all rows instead of just one row. After our DBA restored the table to dbo.foo_bak, I used the below to restore. NOTE: This only works if the backup table (represented by dbo.foo_bak) and the table that you are writing to (dbo.foo) have the exact same column names.
This is what worked for me using a hybrid of a bunch of different answers:
USE [database_name];
GO
SET IDENTITY_INSERT dbo.foo ON;
GO
INSERT INTO [dbo].[foo]
([rown0]
,[row1]
,[row2]
,[row3]
,...
,[rown])
SELECT * FROM [dbo].[foo_bak];
GO
SET IDENTITY_INSERT dbo.foo OFF;
GO
This version of my answer is helpful if you have primary and foreign keys.
As you probably understood from previous answers, you can't really do what you're after.
I think you can understand the problem SQL Server is experiencing with not knowing how to map the additional/missing columns.
That said, since you mention that the purpose of what you're trying to here is backup, maybe we can work with SQL Server and workaround the issue.
Not knowing your exact scenario makes it impossible to hit with a right answer here, but I assume the following:
You wish to manage a backup/audit process for a table.
You probably have a few of those and wish to avoid altering dependent objects on every column addition/removal.
The backup table may contain additional columns for auditing purposes.
I wish to suggest two options for you:
The efficient practice (IMO) for this can be to detect schema changes using DDL triggers and use them to alter the backup table accordingly. This will enable you to use the 'select * from...' approach, because the column list will be consistent between the two tables.
I have used this approach successfully and you can leverage it to have DDL triggers automatically manage your auditing tables. In my case, I used a naming convention for a table requiring audits and the DDL trigger just managed it on the fly.
Another option that might be useful for your specific scenario is to create a supporting view for the tables aligning the column list. Here's a quick example:
create table foo (id int, name varchar(50))
create table foo_bk (id int, name varchar(50), tagid int)
go
create view vw_foo as select id,name from foo
go
create view vw_foo_bk as select id,name from foo_bk
go
insert into vw_foo
select * from vw_foo_bk
go
drop view vw_foo
drop view vw_foo_bk
drop table foo
drop table foo_bk
go
I hope this helps :)
You could try this:
SELECT * INTO foo FROM foo_bk
This is a valid question for example when wanting to append newly imported rows from an imported csv file of the same raw structure into an existing table which may have DB constraints set up such as PKs and FKs.
I would simply do the following, for example:
INSERT INTO roles select * from new_imported_roles_from_csv_file
I also like this when if any new rows violate uniqueness during this operation, the INSERT will fail, not insert anything and in away 'protect' the target table from bad inbound data.