Is there a SQL statement that can return the type of a column in a table?
30 Answers
Using SQL Server:
SELECT DATA_TYPE
FROM INFORMATION_SCHEMA.COLUMNS
WHERE
TABLE_SCHEMA = 'yourSchemaName' AND
TABLE_NAME = 'yourTableName' AND
COLUMN_NAME = 'yourColumnName'
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20Only if you don't want to see the corresponding column name. This will only return the types. If you want to see the column name the type belongs to you will need to select COLUMN_NAME also... Nov 16, 2012 at 13:47
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12And if your table isn't in the default schema you could extend the condition with
AND TABLE_SCHEMA = 'yourSchema'
– luviktorJun 5, 2015 at 7:54 -
14this is great - but is it possible to also have it return the range for column's type? i.e.
varchar(255)
instead ofvarchar
andint(11)
instead ofint
? Jun 29, 2015 at 18:00 -
21@mmcrae : It is possible using column
CHARACTER_MAXIMUM_LENGTH
inINFORMATION_SCHEMA.COLUMNS
. Just do aSELECT * FROM INFORMATION_SCHEMA.COLUMNS
to see all the columns available. Jul 8, 2015 at 12:59 -
3
The easiest way in TSQL is:
SELECT COLUMN_NAME, DATA_TYPE
FROM INFORMATION_SCHEMA.COLUMNS
WHERE TABLE_NAME = 'yourTableName'
For SQL Server, this system stored procedure will return all table information, including column datatypes:
exec sp_help YOURTABLENAME
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7I upvoted as this is although not exactely the answer but provides valuable information to me. E.g. the "IsComputed" information I didn't find in the Information schema but I can find in the sp_help procedure code and copy from there. Sep 21, 2015 at 8:48
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7
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4to clarifiy: the table or view name has to be selected in the editor and then press
Alt+F1
. Not in the solution Object Explorer. This is such a helpful feature May 7, 2019 at 6:32 -
1And not only tables, also working OK on Views, just: 1. Connect to SQL Server in SSMS 2. Open New Query Window 3. Select your database: use <mydatabase> 4. Run command: exec sp_help <myview>– Don G.Jul 19, 2020 at 16:49
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1stackoverflow.com/a/73442049/3934886 this syntax worked for me >> EXEC [ServerName].[DatabaseName].dbo.sp_help 'TableName'.– alex351Aug 22, 2022 at 11:16
If you're using MySQL you could try
SHOW COLUMNS FROM `tbl_name`;
Otherwise you should be able to do
DESCRIBE `tbl_name`;
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2
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4Yes. The
DESCRIBE
syntax is valid in Oracle as well, however MsSQL will not accept this syntax.– fimasNov 15, 2012 at 20:43 -
1
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1
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1I find DESC OR DESCRIBE (depending on the DBMS you use) useful for small tables with 3 or 4 columns then it shows the table structure with column name Nullable flag and column type for big tables however it take more time to return a result and it is harder to find the information your need.– velocityJul 3, 2018 at 11:09
In TSQL/MSSQL it looks like:
SELECT t.name, c.name
FROM sys.tables t
JOIN sys.columns c ON t.object_id = c.object_id
JOIN sys.types y ON y.user_type_id = c.user_type_id
WHERE t.name = ''
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4Actually it is
JOIN sys.types y ON y.user_type_id = c.user_type_id
system_type_id is not unique. sys.columns doc– FabricioMay 18, 2018 at 11:26
To build on the answers above, it's often useful to get the column data type in the same format that you need to declare columns.
For example, varchar(50)
, varchar(max)
, decimal(p, s)
.
This allows you to do that:
SELECT
[Name] = c.[name]
, [Type] =
CASE
WHEN tp.[name] IN ('varchar', 'char', 'varbinary') THEN tp.[name] + '(' + IIF(c.max_length = -1, 'max', CAST(c.max_length AS VARCHAR(25))) + ')'
WHEN tp.[name] IN ('nvarchar','nchar') THEN tp.[name] + '(' + IIF(c.max_length = -1, 'max', CAST(c.max_length / 2 AS VARCHAR(25)))+ ')'
WHEN tp.[name] IN ('decimal', 'numeric') THEN tp.[name] + '(' + CAST(c.[precision] AS VARCHAR(25)) + ', ' + CAST(c.[scale] AS VARCHAR(25)) + ')'
WHEN tp.[name] IN ('datetime2') THEN tp.[name] + '(' + CAST(c.[scale] AS VARCHAR(25)) + ')'
ELSE tp.[name]
END
, [RawType] = tp.[name]
, [MaxLength] = c.max_length
, [Precision] = c.[precision]
, [Scale] = c.scale
, [IsNullable] = c.is_nullable
FROM sys.tables t
JOIN sys.schemas s ON t.schema_id = s.schema_id
JOIN sys.columns c ON t.object_id = c.object_id
JOIN sys.types tp ON c.user_type_id = tp.user_type_id
WHERE s.[name] = 'dbo' AND t.[name] = 'MyTable'
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5This should have been the accepted answer. Thanks, maybe you can add the condition ( t.type = 'U' )--remove system table– IannickApr 9, 2020 at 13:20
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1And VARBINARY types could easily be catered for by adding that to the first
WHEN
line:WHEN tp.[name] IN ('varchar', 'char', 'varbinary') THEN...
Jun 18, 2020 at 9:47 -
1The best answer, I would also add:
, [IsNullable] = c.is_nullable
right afterc.scale
. I think it's very useful.– SeReGaAug 17, 2022 at 19:36 -
Added varbinary and isnullable. @Iannick I'm not clear why type = 'U' is necessary? Is it even possible to have a system table with the same name and schema as a user table?– MgSamSep 29, 2022 at 13:19
in oracle SQL you would do this:
SELECT
DATA_TYPE
FROM
all_tab_columns
WHERE
table_name = 'TABLE NAME' -- in uppercase
AND column_name = 'COLUMN NAME' -- in uppercase
Another variation using MS SQL:
SELECT TYPE_NAME(system_type_id)
FROM sys.columns
WHERE name = 'column_name'
AND [object_id] = OBJECT_ID('[dbo].[table_name]');
Using TSQL/MSSQL
This query will get you: table name, column name, data type, data type length, and allowable nulls
SELECT TABLE_NAME,COLUMN_NAME, DATA_TYPE, CHARACTER_MAXIMUM_LENGTH, IS_NULLABLE
FROM INFORMATION_SCHEMA.COLUMNS
WHERE TABLE_NAME = 'your_table_name'
The only thing that needs to be changed is your_table_name.
This also works as it selects just the column names and their respective character type
SELECT COLUMN_NAME ,DATA_TYPE
FROM INFORMATION_SCHEMA.COLUMNS
WHERE TABLE_NAME = 'Items';
To retrieve the actual declared data types, for example for use in dynamic SQL to ALTER COLUMNs, something like this can be used:
SELECT
TABLE_NAME,
COLUMN_NAME,
DATA_TYPE
+ CASE WHEN DATA_TYPE IN ('char','nchar','varchar','nvarchar','binary','varbinary')
AND CHARACTER_MAXIMUM_LENGTH > 0 THEN
COALESCE('('+CONVERT(varchar,CHARACTER_MAXIMUM_LENGTH)+')','')
ELSE '' END
+ CASE WHEN DATA_TYPE IN ('decimal','numeric') THEN
COALESCE('('+CONVERT(varchar,NUMERIC_PRECISION)+','+CONVERT(varchar,NUMERIC_SCALE)+')','')
ELSE '' END
AS Declaration_Type,
CASE WHEN IS_NULLABLE='NO' THEN 'NOT ' ELSE '' END + 'NULL' AS Nullable
FROM INFORMATION_SCHEMA.COLUMNS
ORDER BY 1,2
USE [YourDatabaseName]
GO
SELECT column_name 'Column Name',
data_type 'Data Type'
FROM information_schema.columns
WHERE table_name = 'YourTableName'
GO
This will return the values Column Name, showing you the names of the columns, and the Data Types of those columns (ints, varchars, etc).
For IBM DB2 :
SELECT TYPENAME FROM SYSCAT.COLUMNS WHERE TABSCHEMA='your_schema_name' AND TABNAME='your_table_name' AND COLNAME='your_column_name'
Using TSQL/MSSQL
You can use INTO
keyword.
The result of SELECT
into a real TABLE
Example: select .... INTO real_table_name
After
sp_help real_table_name
Since some people were asking for the precision as well with the data type, I would like to share my script that I have created for such a purpose.
SELECT TABLE_NAME As 'TableName'
COLUMN_NAME As 'ColumnName'
CONCAT(DATA_TYPE, '(', COALESCE(CHARACTER_MAXIMUM_LENGTH, NUMERIC_PRECISION, DATETIME_PRECISION, ''), IIF(NUMERIC_SCALE <> 0, CONCAT(', ', NUMERIC_SCALE), ''), ')', IIF(IS_NULLABLE = 'YES', ', null', ', not null')) As 'ColumnType'
FROM INFORMATION_SCHEMA.COLUMNS
WHERE -- ...
ORDER BY 'TableName', 'ColumnName'
It's not perfect but it works in most cases.
Using Sql-Server
Another option for MS SQL is to replace the select
query here with the query you want the types for:
declare @sql varchar(4000);
set @sql = 'select ''hi'' as greeting';
select * from master.sys.dm_exec_describe_first_result_set (@sql, Null, 0);
From SQL Server 2012 on:
SELECT * FROM sys.dm_exec_describe_first_result_set( N'SELECT * FROM [my].[Table]', NULL, 0 );
use this query
SELECT * FROM INFORMATION_SCHEMA.COLUMNS
WHERE TABLE_NAME = 'TABLE_NAME'
ORDER BY ORDINAL_POSITION
Below SQL script working perfectly at my end.
SELECT column_name AS 'Column Name',data_type AS 'Data Type'
FROM information_schema.columns
WHERE table_name = '[Table Name]'
In my case I needed to get the data type for Dynamic SQL (Shudder!) anyway here is a function that I created that returns the full data type. For example instead of returning 'decimal' it would return DECIMAL(18,4): dbo.GetLiteralDataType
Use this query to get Schema, Table, Column,Type, max_length, is_nullable
SELECT QUOTENAME(SCHEMA_NAME(tb.[schema_id])) AS 'Schema'
,QUOTENAME(OBJECT_NAME(tb.[OBJECT_ID])) AS 'Table'
,C.NAME as 'Column'
,T.name AS 'Type'
,C.max_length
,C.is_nullable
FROM SYS.COLUMNS C INNER JOIN SYS.TABLES tb ON tb.[object_id] = C.[object_id]
INNER JOIN SYS.TYPES T ON C.system_type_id = T.user_type_id
WHERE tb.[is_ms_shipped] = 0
ORDER BY tb.[Name]
SHOW COLUMNS FROM //table_name// ;
It will give you information about all the columns from the table .
Just if someone finds this useful. In SQL Server:
sp_columns 'yourtablename'
This will give details of all the columns. It gives you column_name, data_type, type_name, precision, length, iss_nullable, etc.
For Apache Derby as shown in this answer:
select columndatatype from sys.syscolumns
where referenceid = (
select tableid from sys.systables
where tablename = 'YOUR_TABEL_NAME'
and columnname= 'YOUR_COLUMN_NAME')
In vb60 you can do this:
Public Cn As ADODB.Connection
'open connection
Dim Rs As ADODB.Recordset
Set Rs = Cn.OpenSchema(adSchemaColumns, Array(Empty, Empty, UCase("Table"), UCase("field")))
'and sample (valRs is my function for rs.fields("CHARACTER_MAXIMUM_LENGTH").value):
RT_Charactar_Maximum_Length = (ValRS(Rs, "CHARACTER_MAXIMUM_LENGTH"))
rt_Tipo = (ValRS(Rs, "DATA_TYPE"))
I find this useful for queries, especially if they use aggregates or several tables (SQL Server)
DECLARE @query nvarchar(max) = 'select * from yourtable';
EXEC sp_describe_first_result_set @query, null, 0;
I think the simplest and most useful way in Microsoft SQL Server Management Studio:
EXEC [ServerName].[DatabaseName].dbo.sp_help 'TableName'
simply do this
describe table test.oim_test_2
you will get details for all your columns with their data types
can use below scrip to gett he same:
SELECT column_name 'Column_Name', data_type 'Data_Type'
FROM information_schema.columns
WHERE table_name = 'Name of your desired table'
Note: It will not return what size you've specified for varchar/nvarchar type column(s)
If want to get full details about a table then can use below script:
EXEC [Your Database Name].dbo.sp_help 'Your Table Name'
sys.syscolumns
table for example.INFORMATION_SCHEMA.COLUMNS
table - if your RDBMS has it.