The short answer to that is no. While you can enter multiple tables in the from
clause of an update statement, you can only specify a single table after the update
keyword. Even if you do write a "updatable" view (which is simply a view that follows certain restrictions), updates like this will fail. Here are the relevant clips from the MSDN documentation (emphasis is mine).
UPDATE (Transact-SQL)
The view referenced by table_or_view_name must be updatable and reference exactly one base table in the FROM clause of the view. For more information about updatable views, see CREATE VIEW (Transact-SQL).
CREATE VIEW (Transact-SQL)
You can modify the data of an underlying base table through a view, as long as the following conditions are true:
- Any modifications, including UPDATE, INSERT, and DELETE statements, must reference columns from only one base table.
- The columns being modified in the view must directly reference the underlying data in the table columns. The columns cannot be derived in any other way, such as through the following:
- An aggregate function: AVG, COUNT, SUM, MIN, MAX, GROUPING, STDEV, STDEVP, VAR, and VARP.
- A computation. The column cannot be computed from an expression that uses other columns. Columns that are formed by using the set operators UNION, UNION ALL, CROSSJOIN, EXCEPT, and INTERSECT amount to a computation and are also not updatable.
- The columns being modified are not affected by GROUP BY, HAVING, or DISTINCT clauses.
- TOP is not used anywhere in the select_statement of the view together with the WITH CHECK OPTION clause.
In all honesty, though, you should consider using two different SQL statements within a transaction as per LBushkin's example.
UPDATE: My original assertion that you could update multiple tables in an updatable view was wrong. On SQL Server 2005 & 2012, it will generate the following error. I have corrected my answer to reflect this.
Msg 4405, Level 16, State 1, Line 1
View or function 'updatable_view' is not updatable because the modification affects multiple base tables.