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In Visual Studio & other IDEs, you can easily auto format your code with a keyboard shortcut, through the menu, or automatically as you type.

I was wondering if there is yet a way to enable this standard feature in SQL Server Management Studio?

I'm working with some large-ish stored procs that are a mangled mess of poorly formatted SQL and it'd be nice if I could just go "Select All -> Format SQL"

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5 Answers 5

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Late answer, but hopefully worthwhile: The Poor Man's T-SQL Formatter is an open-source (free) T-SQL formatter with complete T-SQL batch/script support (any DDL, any DML), SSMS Plugin, command-line bulk formatter, and other options.

It's available for immediate/online use at http://poorsql.com, and just today graduated to "version 1.0" (it was in beta version for a few months), having just acquired support for MERGE statements, OUTPUT clauses, and other finicky stuff.

The SSMS Add-in allows you to set your own hotkey (default is Ctrl-K, Ctrl-F, to match Visual Studio), and formats the entire script or just the code you have selected/highlighted, if any. Output formatting is customizable.

In SSMS 2008 it combines nicely with the built-in intelli-sense, effectively providing more-or-less the same base functionality as Red Gate's SQL Prompt (SQL Prompt does, of course, have extra stuff, like snippets, quick object scripting, etc).

Feedback/feature requests are more than welcome, please give it a whirl if you get the chance!

Disclosure: This is probably obvious already but I wrote this library/tool/site, so this answer is also shameless self-promotion :)

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    Just tried it out, the options settings made this a real winner, and I only tried the website one (work restricts downloads but I'll be trying this out at home later)
    – Stephen
    Jun 12, 2012 at 14:27
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    On SQL server 2012 the default Ctrl+K, Ctrl+F shortcut doesn't work as it says it is already bound to Format Selection. It worked after changing it from DataWarehouse Designer::Ctrl+k, Ctrl+f to Global::Ctrl+k, Ctrl+j. Apr 27, 2015 at 8:40
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    see hints for SSMS 2014 instalations stackoverflow.com/questions/23303026/… May 14, 2015 at 15:09
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    Great tool but not compatible with 2016 RTM
    – dmeglio
    Jun 15, 2016 at 17:21
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    @Jordan: in Windows 10 the .Net Framework 3.5 SP1 (including .Net 2.0) is an optional feature of windows, that can be enabled in the "Turn Windows features on or off" screen/functionality. It's called ".NET Framework 3.5 (includes .NET 2.0 and 3.0)", and it's right at the top of the list of optional features - does this not work for you? (yes, sorry, requiring .Net 2.0 in this day & age is probably not reasonable... Created Issue github.com/TaoK/PoorMansTSqlFormatter/issues/199 to track)
    – Tao
    Jun 1, 2018 at 7:51
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There is a special trick I discovered by accident.

  1. Select the query you wish to format.
  2. Ctrl+Shift+Q (This will open your query in the query designer)
  3. Then just go OK Voila! Query designer will format your query for you. Caveat is that you can only do this for statements and not procedural code, but its better than nothing.
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    Nice tip. Sadly, while this method does work, it does a fairly poor job imho. But at least there's something builtin.
    – John Homer
    Jul 12, 2012 at 15:07
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    Well, as far as I can tell, although it does not really do the best job, it does something, and its out-of-the-box, and you don't have to pay for it. But only one person thought to tick it up as Useful. Im amazed really, I thought I had this one pegged ;-)
    – Justin
    Feb 27, 2013 at 2:46
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    I discovered that, similarly, queries are formatted when pasted into a new View. But, this is much cleaner... +1.
    – Feckmore
    Mar 19, 2014 at 18:20
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    this will work only if the contents of the query can able to represent graphically.
    – kbvishnu
    Dec 17, 2014 at 13:12
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    CAUTION not only it will not work for complex queries, (which are the ones that need formatting,) but also, if you select a complex query and hit Ctrl+Shift+Q under Management Studio v 11.0.6020 it CRASHES, possibly loosing some of your work. (despite the recover function.)
    – Mike Nakis
    Jan 4, 2017 at 15:04
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Azure Data Studio - free and from Microsoft - offers automatic formatting (ctrl + shift + p while editing -> format document). More information about Azure Data Studio here.

While this is not SSMS, it's great for writing queries, free and an official product from Microsoft. It's even cross-platform. Short story: Just switch to Azure Data Studio to write your queries!

Beginning with SQL Server Management Studio (SSMS) 18.7, Azure Data Studio is automatically installed alongside SSMS.

Source

Update: Actually Azure Data Studio is in some way the recommended tool by Microsoft for writing queries (source)

Use Azure Data Studio if you: [..] Are mostly editing or executing queries.

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    Just adding for clarity that Azure Data Studio is a local tool that works for all databases, local, on prem and in the cloud, its name is misleading.
    – HalvarF
    Aug 10, 2021 at 8:41
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    Yes. As @HalvarF said, this is a great piece of software, but horribly named.
    – dgo
    Jan 5, 2022 at 13:55
  • It still has few issues like: constantly disconnecting servers with AAD auth or missing 'view dependencies' functionality. I've tried using it for a week in work, but SSMS is still better for me (even only for queries). Mar 22, 2022 at 13:59
  • I don't know why they haven't put this same functionality into SSMS, but it does work and it's better than nothing. I also found there is a convenient way to open it from SSMS, you can go to Tools >Azure Data Studio and it will open Jun 22, 2022 at 17:41
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    This is great, however, it doesn't capitalize the SQL commands. Aug 12, 2022 at 17:32
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While for some reason Microsoft ignores to implement this in SSMS I found the following site which does a pretty good job of formatting the SQL Code:

https://www.red-gate.com/website/sql-formatter

Also

https://codebeautify.org/sqlformatter

Even though this one is also fairly nice, but the code it produces is a bit too verbose for me so my favorite is

 red-gate.com
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I've had very good results with Devart's SQL Complete tool. The free tier did most of what I wanted for a long time, and I eventually ended up buying it for some of the paid features (especially generating join clauses).

Saves a lot of time and it's particularly nice to be able to define a standard formatting style and save/share it with a team.

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