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Hi all I am new to functions so am having a bit starting trouble here

I have two tables like this

Bugs

BugID|Title|ProjectName|CreatedBy

BugHistory

BughistoryID|BugID|Assignedto|ToStatus|FromStatus

I want to write an insert stored procedure for the Bugs table where I will insert [Title]|[ProjectName] and [CreatedBy] into the bugs table and BugID has Identity and primary key.

After that, I have to insert the BugID of the new title and Tostatus into the BugHistory table. These two steps should be done in a single stored procedure.

I want a select statement where I have to show the bugs table in gridview with [AssignedTo] and [Tostatus] columns from BugHistory table. How can I use functions for this both procedure s any ideas please?

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  • @Ic i tried a store procedure for InsertLogic using joins but it didn't work because of the foreignkey constraint.... Jul 30, 2012 at 4:44
  • using Identity as foreign key is not recommended. However try solution from here
    – bjan
    Jul 30, 2012 at 4:49
  • it's a STORED procedure, stored inside your SQL Server (has nothing to do with a "store")
    – marc_s
    Jul 30, 2012 at 4:54
  • @bjan: I don't think the foreign key (BugID) is an identity column in the BugHistory table - but it references the identity column BugID in the Bugs table - and that's a totally valid, actually a recommended approach for sure!
    – marc_s
    Jul 30, 2012 at 5:10
  • @marc_s I think there is some !@#$%^&, here is what i got. BugID is the primary key of Bugs table and it is an Identity column which is then passed to BugHistory table as foreign key (OP posted a comment stating foreignkey constraint). To me, it looks an identity column is being used as foreign key.
    – bjan
    Jul 30, 2012 at 5:19

2 Answers 2

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Try something like this:

-- create stored procedure to insert a new bug, with parameters
CREATE PROCEDURE dbo.InsertBug 
    @Title VARCHAR(100),
    @ProjectName VARCHAR(100),
    @CreatedBy VARCHAR(100)
AS BEGIN

  -- variable to hold newly inserted "BugID"    
  DECLARE @NewBugID INT

  -- do the insert into the "Bugs" table      
  INSERT INTO dbo.Bugs(Title, ProjectName, CreatedBy)
  VALUES(@Title, @ProjectName, @CreatedBy)

  -- get the new BugID that's been assigned during INSERT      
  SELECT @NewBugID = SCOPE_IDENTITY()

  -- insert into the BugHistory table - since you didn't specify anything,
  -- I assumed the bug gets assigned to whoever created it by default,
  -- and I assumed "ToStatus" is a string column so I assigned "New" to it
  -- ADAPT as needed !
  INSERT INTO dbo.BUgHistory(BugID, AssignedTo, ToStatus)
  VALUES(@NewBugID, @CreatedBy, 'New')
END
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  • just to clear myself, though i have tested SCOPE_IDENTITY with four different executions and it worked fine, what if another insert statement is executed in between INSERT INTO dbo.Bugs(... and SELECT @NewBugID = SCOPE_IDENTITY(), would SCOPE_IDENTITY() return the correct value? could there be any problem with so many parallel executions of this procedure??
    – bjan
    Jul 30, 2012 at 5:25
  • @bjan: SCOPE_IDENTITY returns the last IDENTITY value inserted in that scope. So if you have another INSERT before you check for SCOPE_IDENTITY, it depends on whether that insert also goes into a table with an IDENTITY column - if so, you'll get that IDENTITY value back. Use SCOPE_IDENTITY right after the INSERT you're interested in, and you should be fine.
    – marc_s
    Jul 30, 2012 at 5:42
  • @marc_s what should i do for my select statement Jul 30, 2012 at 6:11
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try creating a trigger in your Bugs to insert data in you BugsHistory AFTER INSERT

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