1

I have three tables: Author, Author Catalog, Products. Author can have multiply books as books can have multiply authors, so I splitted the relation between Author and Production on two «1 to many».

I need to get all book names of one author.

I wrote this code, but it doesn't work with VARCHAR (returns no records).

CREATE PROCEDURE ViewAuthorBooks
    @fname VARCHAR,
    @midname VARCHAR,
    @lname VARCHAR
AS
BEGIN
    SELECT name_prod
    FROM production p
    INNER JOIN author_catalog c ON p.id_prod = c.id_book
    INNER JOIN author a ON c.author_id = a.id_author
    WHERE 
        (a.fname = @fname) 
        AND (a.midname = @midname) 
        AND (a.lname = @lname)
END
GO

So it works with INT.

CREATE PROCEDURE ViewAuthorBooks
    @id INT
AS
BEGIN
    SELECT name_prod
    FROM production p
    INNER JOIN author_catalog c ON p.id_prod = c.id_book
    INNER JOIN author a ON c.author_id = a.id_author
    WHERE a.id_author = @id
END
GO

Is there a way to solve my problem? Maybe I should use another JOIN with VARCHAR?

2
  • 4
    Always specify the length of a Varchar(n)/NVarchar(n). What's the length of author.fname?
    – Ilyes
    Jun 23, 2019 at 10:32
  • 1
    @Sami is right, in this context, @fname VARCHAR means @fname varchar(1). That's why it's not working.
    – Thom A
    Jun 23, 2019 at 10:33

1 Answer 1

2

If you omit the length of a VARCHAR parameter, then you get you get a string of exactly ONE character in length! This is typically not what you want - so therefore: ALWAYS specify a reasonable length for any VARCHAR parameter or variable or column definition!

Try this:

CREATE PROCEDURE ViewAuthorBooks
    @fname VARCHAR(50),
    @midname VARCHAR(50),
    @lname VARCHAR(50)
AS

I'm almost certain now it WILL work just fine!

1
  • I just want to point out that this is always true in SQL Server, but not necessarily in other databases. Jun 23, 2019 at 14:19

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.