I'm trying to pass a TABLE variable to the sp_executesql procedure:

 DECLARE @params NVARCHAR(MAX)
 SET @params = '@workingData TABLE ( col1 VARCHAR(20),
                col2 VARCHAR(50) )'

 EXEC sp_executesql @sql, @params, @workingData

I get the error:

Msg 156, Level 15, State 1, Line 1
Incorrect syntax near the keyword 'TABLE'.

I tried omitting the column specification after 'TABLE'. I also tried to declare the table as a variable inside the dynamic SQL. But no luck...

Seems to me that TABLE variables aren't allowed to be passed as parameters in this procedure?. BTW: I'm running MSSQL2008 R2.

I'm not interested in using a local temp table like #workingData because I load the working data from another procedure:

INSERT INTO @workingData
     EXEC myProc @param1, @param2

Which I cannot do directly into a temp varaible (right?)...

Any help appreciated!

Regards Alex

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80% accept rate
What is the content of your @workingdata variable? – Chris Lively Nov 23 '10 at 17:23
What is the content of all of your variables? I don't think this is doing what you're expecting at all. – Donnie Nov 23 '10 at 17:38
I use the @workingData TABLE to store the results from another procedure which returns a general resultset used by several procedures. This is to reduce redundant code: INSERT INTO @workingData EXEC someProc – Alex Nov 24 '10 at 7:52
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4 Answers

If you are using SQL Server 2008, to pass a table variable to a stored procedure you must

  • First define the table type Example: CREATE TYPE SalesHistoryTableType AS TABLE (
    [Product] varchar NULL,
    [SaleDate] [datetime] NULL,
    [SalePrice] [money] NULL ) GO
  • or Use an existing table type stored in the database Use this query to locate existing table types SELECT * FROM sys.table_types

  • To use in an stored procedure, declare an input variable to be the table: CREATE PROCEDURE usp_myproc ( @TableVariable SalesHistoryTableType READONLY ) AS BEGIN

    Do stuff

    END GO

    • Populate the table variable before passing to the stored proc. DECLARE @DataTable AS SalesHistoryTableType INSERT INTO @DataTable SELECT * FROM (Some data)

    • call the stored proc EXECUTE usp_myproc @TableVariable = @DataTable

More complete discussion here

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1  
+1 It assumes he is not trying to make changes to the table variable that will be visible in the calling scope though I think? – Martin Smith Jan 1 '11 at 17:39
I need this to work with dynamic SQL passed into so_executeSql. I tried to declare the parameter as a table type in the @params specification-parameter above. I'm not calling a stored procedure directly. . . – Alex Jan 2 '11 at 8:01
feedback

OK, this will get me what I want, but surely isn't pretty:

DECLARE @workingData TABLE ( col1 VARCHAR(20),
        col2 VARCHAR(20) )

    INSERT INTO @workingData
        EXEC myProc

    /* Unfortunately table variables are outside scope
       for the dynamic SQL later run. We copy the 
       table to a temp table. 
       The table variable is needed to extract data directly
       from the strored procedure call above...
    */
    SELECT * 
    INTO #workingData
    FROM @workingData


        DECLARE @sql NVARCHAR(MAX)
    SET @sql = 'SELECT * FROM #workingData'

    EXEC sp_executesql @sql

There must be a better way to pass this temporary resultset into sp_executesql!?

Regards Alex

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While this may not directly answer your question, it should solve your issue overall.

You can indeed capture the results of a Stored Procedure execution into a temporary table:

INSERT INTO #workingData
EXEC myProc 

So change your code to look like the following:

CREATE TABLE #workingData ( col1 VARCHAR(20),    
    col2 VARCHAR(20) )    

INSERT INTO #workingData    
    EXEC myProc    

DECLARE @sql NVARCHAR(MAX)    
SET @sql = 'SELECT * FROM #workingData'    

EXEC sp_executesql @sql    

Regards, Tim

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One thing to keep in mind is that the data types within the table definition and the resultset returned from the SP must match. – Tim Friesen Nov 25 '11 at 18:22
Just realized that I might be about a year late on this answer. :) Sorry! – Tim Friesen Nov 25 '11 at 18:28
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Alter PROCEDURE sp_table_getcount 
 @tblname nvarchar(50) ,
 @totalrow int output 
AS
BEGIN

Declare @params nvarchar(1000)
Declare @sql nvarchar(1000)
set @sql = N'Select @cnt= count(*) From @tbl'
set @params = N'@tbl nvarchar(50) , @cnt int OUTPUT'
Exec sp_executesql @sql , @params ,@tbl=@tblname ,  @cnt = @totalrow OUTPUT   
END
GO

Please note that the above code will not work as table as a object is out of the scope.It will give you the error: must declare table variable.In order to work around we can do the following.

Alter PROCEDURE sp_table_getcount 
 @tblname nvarchar(50) ,
 @totalrow int output 
AS
BEGIN

Declare @params nvarchar(1000)
Declare @sql nvarchar(1000)
set @sql = N'Select @cnt= count(*) From dbo.' + @tblname
set @params = N'@cnt int OUTPUT'
Exec sp_executesql @sql , @params , @cnt = @totalrow OUTPUT   
END
GO
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