The following query:

WITH 
    CteProductLookup(ProductId, oid) 
    AS 
    (
        SELECT p.ProductID, p.oid
        FROM [dbo].[ME_CatalogProducts] p 
    )

SELECT 
    rel.Name as RelationshipName,
    pl.ProductId as FromProductId,
    pl2.ProductId as ToProductId
FROM 
    (
    [dbo].[ME_CatalogRelationships] rel 
    INNER JOIN CteProductLookup pl 
    ON pl.oid = rel.from_oid
    ) 
    INNER JOIN CteProductLookup pl2 
    ON pl2.oid = rel.to_oid
WHERE
    rel.Name = 'BundleItem' AND
    pl.ProductId = 'MX12345';

Is generating this error:

Msg 319, Level 15, State 1, Line 5 Incorrect syntax near the keyword 'with'. If this statement is a common table expression, an xmlnamespaces clause or a change tracking context clause, the previous statement must be terminated with a semicolon.

On execution only. There are no errors/warnings in the sql statement in the managment studio.

Any ideas?

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80% accept rate
why even use a CTE here? couldn't you just join to the actual table [dbo].[ME_CatalogProducts] instead of the cte CteProductLookup, which doesn't really do anything? – KM. Apr 30 '10 at 19:26
For Extension later, but you're right I don't need it in this example. – Aren Apr 30 '10 at 19:34
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3 Answers

up vote 2 down vote accepted

always use with statement like ;WITH then you'll never get this error. The WITH command required a ; between it any any previous command, by always using ;WITH you'll never have to remember to do this.

see WITH common_table_expression (Transact-SQL), from the section Guidelines for Creating and Using Common Table Expressions:

When a CTE is used in a statement that is part of a batch, the statement before it must be followed by a semicolon.

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It should be legal to put a semicolon directly before the WITH keyword.

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;WITH 
    CteProductLookup(ProductId, oid) 
    AS 
...
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