show/hide this revision's text 2 finished statement about primary key

I know your given example is simplified, but to meet those requirements you could do the following.

Since the INSERT/SELECT is one statement, it's implicitly in a transaction. If you need to do something that you can't express relationally you'll need to wrap it in an explicit transaction.

Primary key ensures no concurrency issues beyond your given default transaction isolation.

CREATE TABLE Sequence
(
    [Name] char(1),
    [Seq] int
    PRIMARY KEY (Name, Seq)
)
GO
CREATE PROCEDURE Sequence_Insert
(
    @name char(1)
)
AS
INSERT INTO Sequence(Name, Seq)
SELECT 
    @Name,
    COALESCE(MAX(Seq),0) + 1
FROM
    Sequence
WHERE
    Name = @Name
GO
exec Sequence_Insert 'A'
exec Sequence_Insert 'A'
exec Sequence_Insert 'B'
exec Sequence_Insert 'A'
exec Sequence_Insert 'C'
GO
SELECT * FROM Sequence
show/hide this revision's text 1

I know your given example is simplified, but to meet those requirements you could do the following.

Since the INSERT/SELECT is one statement, it's implicitly in a transaction. If you need to do something that you can't express relationally you'll need to wrap it in an explicit transaction.

Primary key

CREATE TABLE Sequence
(
    [Name] char(1),
    [Seq] int
    PRIMARY KEY (Name, Seq)
)
GO
CREATE PROCEDURE Sequence_Insert
(
    @name char(1)
)
AS
INSERT INTO Sequence(Name, Seq)
SELECT 
    @Name,
    COALESCE(MAX(Seq),0) + 1
FROM
    Sequence
WHERE
    Name = @Name
GO
exec Sequence_Insert 'A'
exec Sequence_Insert 'A'
exec Sequence_Insert 'B'
exec Sequence_Insert 'A'
exec Sequence_Insert 'C'
GO
SELECT * FROM Sequence