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I am calling

id int ,
tableid int,
seid int,
ptid int,
VISID NVARCHAR(50),
Tname AS SYSNAME ,
ColumnValue NVARCHAR(50),
ColumnKey NVARCHAR(50),
@HashValue NVARCHAR(50) OUTPUT

select @HashValue = CHECKSUM_AGG(checksum(id,tableid, seid, ptid, VISID, Tname, ColumnKey, ColumnValue))  from #FDATA 

When #FDATA contains:

17 3028 100 100003 SCRN form.LG_AE 320 InvInit

17 3028 100 100003 SCRN form.LG_AE 321 AuthIn

......... (6 rows in total with similar data, no null values)

it returns **********

But when #FDATA contains:

17 3019 101 101001 SCRN form.LG_AE 320 InvInit

17 3019 101 101001 SCRN form.LG_AE 321 AUTHIn

...... (65 rows in total with similar data, no null values)

It returns an integer as expected

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  • Sorry you don't give us enough information to recreate your problem, please provide a minimally complete question, include table structures and enough data that shows your problem.
    – Steve Ford
    Jul 26, 2017 at 9:06
  • According to documentation (here) it returns int. What type is variable @HashValue?
    – Rokuto
    Jul 26, 2017 at 9:07
  • DECLARE @HashValue int
    – aggicd
    Jul 26, 2017 at 9:08
  • And when you are selecting @HashValue it returns stars? Could you provide more information (maybe full data if it is possible)?
    – Rokuto
    Jul 26, 2017 at 9:12
  • 1
    I've found similar problem here. Check it. How are you selecting @HashValue? Are you casting it to varchar?
    – Rokuto
    Jul 26, 2017 at 9:21

1 Answer 1

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According to this and comments, function STR returns * because the number, which is stored in @HashValue variable, exceeds the specified length (default 10). Instead of STR use CAST, for example:

PRINT CAST(@HashValue as varchar(20))

or just print value without casting it:

PRINT @HashValue

or use function STR, but with length parameter:

PRINT STR(@HashValue,20)

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