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The Data Management Journal

What is deferred name resolution and why do you need to care?

by SQLDenis


Permalink 08 Sep 2008 08:23 , Categories: Data Modelling & Design Tags: gotcha, howto, sql server, t-sql, tip, trick

So I posted a teaser in the puzzles forum. Without running this, try to guess what will happen?

  1. DECLARE @x INT
  2.  
  3. SET @x = 1
  4.  
  5. IF (@x = 0)
  6. BEGIN
  7.     SELECT 1 AS VALUE INTO #temptable
  8. END
  9. ELSE
  10. BEGIN
  11.    SELECT 2 AS VALUE INTO #temptable
  12. END
  13.  
  14. SELECT * FROM #temptable –what does this return

This is the error you get
Server: Msg 2714, Level 16, State 1, Line 12
There is already an object named ‘#temptable’ in the database.

You can do something like this to get around the issue with the temp table

  1. DECLARE @x INT
  2.  
  3. SET @x = 1
  4.  
  5. CREATE TABLE #temptable (VALUE INT)
  6. IF (@x = 0)
  7. BEGIN
  8.     INSERT #temptable
  9.     SELECT 1
  10. END
  11. ELSE
  12. BEGIN
  13.     INSERT #temptable
  14.     SELECT 2
  15. END
  16.  
  17. SELECT * FROM #temptable –what does this return

So what is thing called Deferred Name Resolution? Here is what is explained in Books On Line

When a stored procedure is created, the statements in the procedure are parsed for syntactical accuracy. If a syntactical error is encountered in the procedure definition, an error is returned and the stored procedure is not created. If the statements are syntactically correct, the text of the stored procedure is stored in the syscomments system table.

When a stored procedure is executed for the first time, the query processor reads the text of the stored procedure from the syscomments system table of the procedure and checks that the names of the objects used by the procedure are present. This process is called deferred name resolution because objects referenced by the stored procedure need not exist when the stored procedure is created, but only when it is executed.

In the resolution stage, Microsoft SQL Server 2000 also performs other validation activities (for example, checking the compatibility of a column data type with variables). If the objects referenced by the stored procedure are missing when the stored procedure is executed, the stored procedure stops executing when it gets to the statement that references the missing object. In this case, or if other errors are found in the resolution stage, an error is returned.

So what is happening is that beginning with SQL server 7 deferred name resolution was enabled for real tables but not for temporary tables. If you change the code to use a real table instead of a temporary table you won’t have any problem
Run this to see what I mean

  1. DECLARE @x INT
  2.  
  3. SET @x = 1
  4.  
  5. IF (@x = 0)
  6. BEGIN
  7.     SELECT 1 AS VALUE INTO temptable
  8. END
  9. ELSE
  10. BEGIN
  11.    SELECT 2 AS VALUE INTO temptable
  12. END
  13.  
  14. SELECT * FROM temptable –what does this return

What about variables? Let’s try it out, run this

  1. DECLARE @x INT
  2.  
  3. SET @x = 1
  4.  
  5. IF (@x = 0)
  6. BEGIN
  7.     DECLARE @i INT
  8.     SELECT @i = 5
  9. END
  10. ELSE
  11. BEGIN
  12.    DECLARE @i INT
  13.    SELECT @i = 6
  14. END
  15.  
  16. SELECT @i

And you get the follwing error
Server: Msg 134, Level 15, State 1, Line 13
The variable name ‘@i’ has already been declared. Variable names must be unique within a query batch or stored procedure.

Now why do you need to care about deferred name resolution? Let’s take another example from a blogpost I made a while back: Do you depend on sp_depends (no pun intended)

First create this proc

  1. CREATE PROC SomeTestProc
  2. AS
  3. SELECT dbo.somefuction(1)
  4. GO

now create this function

  1. CREATE FUNCTION somefuction(@id INT)
  2. RETURNS INT
  3. AS
  4. BEGIN
  5. SELECT @id = 1
  6. RETURN @id
  7. END
  8. Go

now run this

  1. SP_DEPENDS ’somefuction’

result: Object does not reference any object, and no objects reference it.

Most people will not create a proc before they have created the function. So when does this behavior rear its ugly head? When you script out all the objects in a database, if the function or any objects referenced by an object are created after the object that references them then sp_depends won’t be 100% correct

SQL Server 2005 makes it pretty easy to do it yourself

  1. SELECT specific_name,*
  2. FROM information_schema.routines
  3. WHERE object_definition(OBJECT_ID(specific_name)) LIKE ‘%somefuction%’
  4. AND routine_type = ‘procedure’
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How Do You Check If A Temporary Table Exists In SQL Server

by SQLDenis


Permalink 22 Aug 2008 08:57 , Categories: Data Modelling & Design Tags: howto, programming, sql server, t-sql, tip, trick

I see more and more people asking how to check if a temporary table exists. How do you check if a temp table exists?

You can use IF OBJECT_ID(’tempdb..#temp’) IS NOT NULL Let’s see how it works

  1. –Create table
  2. USE Norhtwind
  3. GO
  4.  
  5. CREATE TABLE #temp(id INT)
  6.  
  7. –Check if it exists
  8. IF OBJECT_ID(‘tempdb..#temp’) IS NOT NULL
  9. BEGIN
  10. PRINT ‘#temp exists!’
  11. END
  12. ELSE
  13. BEGIN
  14. PRINT ‘#temp does not exist!’
  15. END
  16.  
  17. –Another way to check with an undocumented optional second parameter
  18. IF OBJECT_ID(‘tempdb..#temp’,‘u’) IS NOT NULL
  19. BEGIN
  20. PRINT ‘#temp exists!’
  21. END
  22. ELSE
  23. BEGIN
  24. PRINT ‘#temp does not exist!’
  25. END
  26.  
  27.  
  28.  
  29. –Don’t do this because this checks the local DB and will return does not exist
  30. IF OBJECT_ID(‘tempdb..#temp’,‘local’) IS NOT NULL
  31. BEGIN
  32. PRINT ‘#temp exists!’
  33. END
  34. ELSE
  35. BEGIN
  36. PRINT ‘#temp does not exist!’
  37. END
  38.  
  39.  
  40. –unless you do something like this
  41. USE tempdb
  42. GO
  43.  
  44. –Now it exists again
  45. IF OBJECT_ID(‘tempdb..#temp’,‘local’) IS NOT NULL
  46. BEGIN
  47. PRINT ‘#temp exists!’
  48. END
  49. ELSE
  50. BEGIN
  51. PRINT ‘#temp does not exist!’
  52. END
  53.  
  54. –let’s go back to Norhtwind again
  55. USE Norhtwind
  56. GO
  57.  
  58.  
  59. –Check if it exists
  60. IF OBJECT_ID(‘tempdb..#temp’) IS NOT NULL
  61. BEGIN
  62. PRINT ‘#temp exists!’
  63. END
  64. ELSE
  65. BEGIN
  66. PRINT ‘#temp does not exist!’
  67. END

now open a new window from Query Analyzer (CTRL + N) and run this code again

  1. –Check if it exists
  2. IF OBJECT_ID(‘tempdb..#temp’) IS NOT NULL
  3. BEGIN
  4. PRINT ‘#temp exists!’
  5. END
  6. ELSE
  7. BEGIN
  8. PRINT ‘#temp does not exist!’
  9. END

It doesn’t exist and that is correct since it’s a local temp table not a global temp table

Well let’s test that statement

  1. –create a global temp table
  2. CREATE TABLE ##temp(id INT) –Notice the 2 pound signs, that’s how you create a global variable
  3.  
  4. –Check if it exists
  5. IF OBJECT_ID(‘tempdb..##temp’) IS NOT NULL
  6. BEGIN
  7. PRINT ‘##temp exists!’
  8. END
  9. ELSE
  10. BEGIN
  11. PRINT ‘##temp does not exist!’
  12. END

It exists, right?
Now run the same code in a new Query Analyzer window (CTRL + N)

  1. –Check if it exists
  2. IF OBJECT_ID(‘tempdb..##temp’) IS NOT NULL
  3. BEGIN
  4. PRINT ‘##temp exists!’
  5. END
  6. ELSE
  7. BEGIN
  8. PRINT ‘##temp does not exist!’
  9. END

And yes this time it does exist since it’s a global table

I have also added this to our wiki, read it here: Check If Temporary Table Exists

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