I had the same question which is why I stumbled across this post. From what I can see there actually is a difference and the spelling isn't the only thing different between the two cases. These two functions are not equivalent because of the usage.
Links and colors
- RAISERROR - Has an MSDN link and it is colored cyan/blue in
SSMS
- RAISEERROR - Doesn't have an MSDN link from what I can find
right now and it is colored magenta in SSMS
Credit where credit is due - the color observation was raised already by user Sahuagin in the comments under the question above.
Are you using SQL Server 2012?
Before I move on I think it is fair to state that if you are using SQL Server 2012 or higher, DO NOT USE RAISERRROR! You should be using THROW.
So what's the difference?
You can use RAISERROR (blue) in a single inline statement, versus using RAISEERROR (magenta) which depends on being contained inside of different code block it seems like; based on the error that is returned. The exact syntax error is the following:
Incorrect syntax near 'RAISEERROR'. Expecting CONVERSATION, DIALOG,
DISTRIBUTED or TRANSACTION.
RAISERROR Example (One E - blue)
DECLARE @foo varchar(200)
SET @foo = ''
IF NULLIF(@foo, '') IS NULL
BEGIN
-- To fix this line, remove one "E" to read RAISERROR
RAISEERROR('Not enough Vespene Gas!', 16, 1);
RETURN -- This is required otherwise execution will continue!
END
-- You need the RETURN above or this will execute
SELECT Critical_TSqlLine = 1;
Now if you just remove one "E" from the above code, that will function just fine. I didn't provide the execution results, but if you open up SSMS and drop that in and execute I guarantee it will work.
RAISEERROR Example (Two Es - magenta)
I spent entirely too much time trying to figure out how to use this version of the function and I cannot provide an example where this will actually work. I looked into using CONVERSATION, DIALOG, DISTRIBUTED or TRANSACTION and I couldn't get the syntax to work. Long story short, don't concern yourself with this version just use the single E version. For those of you using SQL Server 2012, this shouldn't concern you anymore anyhow.
RAISEERROR
pink andRAISERROR
blue.