3

I just started SQL with Microsoft SQL Server 2008 R2 and I want to select a list of Ids and run each of them through a stored procedure but am not sure how to do it.

SELECT Id 
FROM UserId 
WHERE ProgramId = @ProgramId

Then, I have created a procedure called temp_sp_UpdateIds

Normally I can just run the stored procedure with

EXEC temp_sp_UpdateIds @ProgramId

but I am not sure how to run the stored procedure with the list of Ids returned from the select statement and place it under @ProgramId

Do I need to store the Ids in a local table or something?

Thanks.

3
  • does the stored proc return a value?
    – Bohemian
    May 7, 2013 at 20:47
  • nop, the stored proc simply inserts May 7, 2013 at 20:48
  • Try this SO solution here or you can change your SP to a function and then you can call function in sql query itself
    – rs.
    May 7, 2013 at 20:49

4 Answers 4

6

You can use Table-Valued Parameters

Creating a Table Type and SP

CREATE TYPE dbo.ListOfIds AS TABLE(Id int PRIMARY KEY)
GO

CREATE PROCEDURE dbo.temp_sp_UpdateIds
 (
  @ListOfIds dbo.ListOfIds READONLY
  )
AS
BEGIN
...body of procedure
END
GO

Calling a Procedure with a Table-Valued Parameter

DECLARE @ListOfIds dbo.ListOfIds
INSERT @ListOfIds
SELECT Id
FROM UserId
WHERE ProgramId = @ProgramId

EXEC dbo.temp_sp_UpdateIds @ListOfIds

See SQLFiddle

2
  • thx! I am trying to do this but how do I use @ListOfIds inside my sp? When I ref to the variable it returns Must declare the scalar variable @ListOfIds? And for the table-valued paramters/table type, is it simply creating a temporary table which only in the scope of the script? thx in advance. May 7, 2013 at 22:13
  • I suggested using Table-valued parameters to send multiple rows of data to procedure, without creating a temporary table.Inside procedure you can only read data from a Table-valued parameter (e.g. perform whether operations a restrict or filtering data, etc.) In some cases better performance than temporary tables or other ways to pass a list of parameters. In answer was added a simple demo. May 8, 2013 at 10:36
2

You're unfortunately looking a cursor. Concept is you will provide your query in the first block, declare the variable(s) you'll need to operate your proc and then iterate through them.

DECLARE CSR CURSOR
READ_ONLY
FOR SELECT ProgramId FROM UserId 

DECLARE @programid int
OPEN CSR

FETCH NEXT FROM CSR INTO @programid
WHILE (@@fetch_status <> -1)
BEGIN
    IF (@@fetch_status <> -2)
    BEGIN
        EXECUTE temp_sp_UpdateIds @programId
    END
    FETCH NEXT FROM CSR INTO @programId
END

CLOSE CSR

DEALLOCATE CSR
GO

The other option that comes to mind is to generate the EXEC calls in SQL, concatenate all of that together with a semicolon and then exec that.

2
  • Do you mean @programId in the first fetch?
    – John Dewey
    May 7, 2013 at 20:53
  • @JohnDewey I wasn't quite sure how the OP used it. They are executing a SELECT based on the value of programid in the query but then using that same programid in the EXEC call. I figured they better understood their logic and just needed the basic parts of how to call a proc for each row in a resultset. I'm open to improving the clarity of the answer if you have suggestions
    – billinkc
    May 7, 2013 at 20:57
0

If you can change the proc to a function (that returns a value - even just null) you can simply do this:

SELECT temp_sp_UpdateIds(id) FROM UserId WHERE ProgramId=@ProgramId
-1

In normal case you may do something like this:

SELECT * FROM UserId WHERE ProgramId in (SELECT ProgramId FROM t WHERE ...)

If procedure fill @ParamId by somthing like select result with one column - it must work

1
  • huh? where is the call to the stored proc?
    – Bohemian
    May 7, 2013 at 20:50

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