Sep 8th, 2009 | No Comments

This is the traditional method for inserting multiple values in a table.

USE YourDBName
GO
INSERT INTO MyTableName (FirstCol, SecondCol)
VALUES (‘First’,1);
INSERT INTO MyTableName (FirstCol, SecondCol)
VALUES (‘Second’,2);
INSERT INTO MyTableName (FirstCol, SecondCol)
VALUES (‘Third’,3);
INSERT INTO MyTableName (FirstCol, SecondCol)
VALUES (‘Fourth’,4);
INSERT INTO MyTableName (FirstCol, SecondCol)
VALUES (‘Fifth’,5);
GO

However this cannot be used if you want to insert multiple values into the table via your code because in this case you’ll have to write the code to insert the value in the DB in a for loop which is not at all feasible.

So you can write the code to generate the insert statement like,

USE YourDB
GO
INSERT INTO MyTableName (FirstCol, SecondCol)
SELECT ‘First’ ,1
UNION ALL
SELECT ‘Second’ ,2
UNION ALL
SELECT ‘Third’ ,3
UNION ALL
SELECT ‘Fourth’ ,4
UNION ALL
SELECT ‘Fifth’ ,5
GO

The above code inserts multiple values into DB with a single SQL insert query. This is the best means to use in your code as you’ll just have to create this query in your for loop and the query will run only once.

Also you can use the following query syntax for multiple inserts in SQL 2008

USE YourDB
GO
INSERT INTO MyTableName (FirstCol, SecondCol)
VALUES (‘First’,1),
(‘Second‘,2),
(‘Third‘,3),
(‘Fourth‘,4),
(‘Fifth‘,5)

Please let me know if you have any better ideas than this one.
Njoy coding!!!

Written by Ajay Matharu

September 8th, 2009 at 10:31 am

Jul 25th, 2009 | No Comments

Here is the query that will help you to find a particular column in the database. This query will return you the table name in which that column is found.

select so.name, sc.name
from syscolumns sc
inner join sysobjects so on sc.id = so.id
where sc.name = 'SystemColumn'

Written by Ajay Matharu

July 25th, 2009 at 12:03 pm

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