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UPDATE: DELETE from a trigger works on both MSSql 7 and MSSql 2008.

I'm no relational guru, nor a SQL standards wonk. However - contrary to the accepted answer - MSSQL deals just fine with both recursive and nested trigger evaluation. I don't know about other RDBMSs.

The relevant options are 'recursive triggers' and 'nested triggers'. Nested triggers are limited to 32 levels, and default to 1. Recursive triggers are off by default, and there's no talk of a limit - but frankly, I've never turned them on, so I don't know what happens with the inevitable stack overflow. I suspect MSSQL would just kill your spid (or there is a recursive limit).

Of course, that just shows that the accepted answer has the wrong reason, not that it's incorrect. However, prior to INSTEAD OF triggers, I recall writing ON INSERT triggers that would merrily UPDATE the just inserted rows. This all worked fine, and as expected.

I only have an aging SQL 7 box in front of me right now (which, coincidentally, is the last version without INSTEAD OF triggers) but a

A quick test of DELETEing the just inserted row also works:

 CREATE TABLE Test ( Id int IDENTITY(1,1), Column1 varchar(10) )
 GO

 CREATE TRIGGER trTest ON Test 
 FOR INSERT 
 AS
    SET NOCOUNT ON
    DELETE FROM Test WHERE Column1 = 'ABCDEF'
 GO

 INSERT INTO Test (Column1) VALUES ('ABCDEF')
 --SCOPE_IDENTITY() should be the same, but doesn't exist in SQL 7
 PRINT @@IDENTITY --Will print 1. Run it again, and it'll print 2, 3, etc.
 GO

 SELECT * FROM Test --No rows
 GO

So, unless you can chalk this up to a pretty huge breaking change from SQL 7 (I'm sure someone else can test it against SQL 2005 before I'm back at the office...feel free to update with results) - I think you

You have something else going on here.

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I'm no relational guru, nor a SQL standards wonk. However - contrary to the accepted answer - MSSQL deals just fine with both recursive and nested trigger evaluation. I don't know about other RDBMSs.

The relevant options are 'recursive triggers' and 'nested triggers'. Nested triggers are limited to 32 levels, and default to 1. Recursive triggers are off by default, and there's no talk of a limit - but frankly, I've never turned them on, so I don't know what happens with the inevitable stack overflow. I suspect MSSQL would just kill your spid (or there is a recursive limit).

Of course, that just shows that the accepted answer has the wrong reason, not that it's incorrect. However, prior to INSTEAD OF triggers, I recall writing ON INSERT triggers that would merrily UPDATE the just inserted rows. This all worked fine, and as expected.

I only have an aging SQL 7 box in front of me right now (which, coincidentally, is the last version without INSTEAD OF triggers) but a quick test of DELETEing the just inserted row also works:

 CREATE TABLE Test ( Id int IDENTITY(1,1), Column1 varchar(10) )
 GO

 CREATE TRIGGER trTest ON Test 
 FOR INSERT 
 AS
    SET NOCOUNT ON
    DELETE FROM Test WHERE Column1 = 'ABCDEF'
 GO

 INSERT INTO Test (Column1) VALUES ('ABCDEF')
 --SCOPE_IDENTITY() should be the same, but doesn't exist in SQL 7
 PRINT @@IDENTITY --Will print 1. Run it again, and it'll print 2, 3, etc.
 GO

 SELECT * FROM Test --No rows
 GO

So, unless you can chalk this up to a pretty huge breaking change from SQL 7 (I'm sure someone else can test it against SQL 2005 before I'm back at the office...feel free to update with results) - I think you have something else going on here.