3

I´m using Delphi 5 with SQL Server 2000 here.

I have created an ADOQuery on top of an updatable view with an INSTEAD OF DELETE trigger.

The updatable view is basically used for controlling soft deletes. It filters out records which are marked as deleted and it hides the controlling column as well.

It all works fine when I´m issuing direct DELETE commands to the database. I delete the record on the view and the underlying table gets updated, doing the soft delete as expected.

When I try to use the ADOQuery to delete a record, it bypasses the view and deletes the record directly on the underlying table, so the instead-of-delete trigger on the view is never fired.

I´m also using referential constraints and the delete is erroring out because of them, but I don´t know if this matters. This does not happen when issuing delete commands to the view.

Would any of you guys know how to work around this annoying behaviour?

5
  • 3
    Have you tried profiling the server to see what SQL commands the ADOQuery executes?
    – Will A
    Sep 23, 2010 at 20:19
  • exec sp_executesql N'DELETE FROM "CONTROLEPROCESSOS_MIGRACAO".."_tblCadUsuarios" WHERE "CODUSUARIO"=@P1', N'@P1 nvarchar(5)', N'40/04' _tblCadUsuarios is the actual table and the view is named tblCadUsuarios Sep 23, 2010 at 20:30
  • 1
    My SQL server knowledge is a dated and I may trample all over what it is/is not capable of, but why is the INSTEAD OF DELETE trigger defined on a view and not somehow implemented directly against the table? If I wanted soft deletes on a table, I would try to make sure that I (or anybody else) would not get in trouble because I forgot to use the view...? Sep 24, 2010 at 6:30
  • @Marjan I bet he had to do it to change the functionality of the database but keep some already-built client software working. Thus why the view is called 'tblCadUsuarios'. Despite the horrible systems Hungarian naming convention, it most likely was a real table once upon a time...
    – ErikE
    Sep 24, 2010 at 16:00
  • @emtucifor: well spotted. I didn't even notice the view's name and I usually read the comments too :) Sep 24, 2010 at 17:28

1 Answer 1

1

Notice that it's deleting directly from the main table instead? This is probably because it's detecting that it's a view and working with the underlying table itself. To prevent this, declare your view WITH VIEW_METADATA, see ALTER VIEW for more information.

Then the ADO library will treat the view as a table. Be aware that you could get unwanted side effects by tricking your DB library like this, such as in cases when the delete isn't actually performed or it does an update instead of a delete.

0

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.