I have seen people have design pattern issues with this logic.
1 - Test existence of record.
2 - If it does not exist, insert the record.
Especially if concurrency comes into play. Depending upon isolation level, you might have duplicate data or key violations.
Why not place a primary key on pname and pnumber in the first place. I am assuming you are talking about a person table.
My example.
--
-- Setup sample table w/data
--
-- Sample table
create table #person
(
person_id int identity (1, 1),
person_name varchar(64) not null,
person_no varchar(16) not null
);
go
-- primary key
alter table #person
add primary key (person_no, person_name)
go
-- first insert works
insert into #person (person_name, person_no) values ('bilbo', 123)
go
The key to the solution is to trap the primary key violation. Ignoring this error might be a good or bad depending upon your business logic.
I am deciding to ignore the issue.
--
-- Ignore primary key violations
--
-- Try these steps
BEGIN TRY
-- Second insert fails
insert into #person (person_name, person_no) values ('bilbo', 123)
END TRY
-- Error Handler
BEGIN CATCH
-- Ignore PK error
IF ERROR_NUMBER() <> 2627
SELECT
ERROR_NUMBER() AS ErrorNumber
,ERROR_SEVERITY() AS ErrorSeverity
,ERROR_STATE() AS ErrorState
,ERROR_PROCEDURE() AS ErrorProcedure
,ERROR_LINE() AS ErrorLine
,ERROR_MESSAGE() AS ErrorMessage;
END CATCH
This solution eliminates duplicate entries and does not report PK violations.