2

I have in my application a user defined function which takes a comma separated list as an argument. It splits the items and plugs them in to a table variable and returns the result.

This function works well, except that when the items in the comma separated list exceed 1000, it ignores the remainder. That is to say, if I plug in 1239, the first 1000 rows will be returned and the remaining 239 are entirely ignored. There are no errors when this occurs.

I can't help but feel that this is due to some sort of limitation that I should know about, but I can't seem to find any information about it. Is it a limitation on the amount of rows that can be stored in a table variable? Or am I missing something in the actual code itself? Can anyone assist? Going squirrely-eyed over here.

ALTER FUNCTION [dbo].[ufnConvertArrayToIntTable] (@IntArray VARCHAR(8000))
RETURNS @retIntTable TABLE
(
    ID int
)
AS
BEGIN
DECLARE @Delimiter char(1)
SET @Delimiter = ','

DECLARE @Item varchar(8)
IF CHARINDEX(@Delimiter,@IntArray,0) <> 0
    BEGIN   
    WHILE CHARINDEX(@Delimiter,@IntArray,0) <> 0
        BEGIN
        SELECT
            @Item = RTRIM(LTRIM(SUBSTRING(@IntArray,1,CHARINDEX(@Delimiter,@IntArray,0)-1))),
            @IntArray = RTRIM(LTRIM(SUBSTRING(@IntArray,CHARINDEX(@Delimiter,@IntArray,0)+1,LEN(@IntArray))))
            IF LEN(@Item) > 0
                INSERT INTO @retIntTable SELECT @Item
        END
        IF LEN(@IntArray) > 0
            INSERT INTO @retIntTable SELECT @IntArray
    END
ELSE
    BEGIN
    IF LEN(@IntArray) > 0
        INSERT INTO @retIntTable SELECT @IntArray
    END
    RETURN  
END;
0

3 Answers 3

2

You define your input variable as varchar(8000) and your @Item variable is varchar(8). Are your items typically 8 characters each? Is the string you send in w/ over 1000 items more than 8000 characters? Try changing your input to varchar(max) instead.

2
  • Bang on! Thanks buddy. I can't believe I didn't see that. I increased the varchar variable to MAX and it worked. Each of the items are 7 characters in length, always. They are separated by a single comma. This means that the string length was always being truncated at exactly 1000 records. On a side note, though, what is the limitation of nvarchar(max)? Aug 4, 2011 at 17:39
  • The limitation is that it can't be indexed.
    – Derek
    Aug 4, 2011 at 18:09
1

Are all of your comma seperated values 8 chars long? If so, then the input parameter will only be able to hold 888 (8000 / 9(including the comma) of them..

1

It's because your input parameter is limited to 8000 characters.

You might try calling the function using substring... Maybe:

WHERE 
[myField] IN(Select ID from [dbo].[ufnConvertArrayToIntTable](substring(@inputarray, 1, 4000))
OR
[myField] IN(Select ID from [dbo].[ufnConvertArrayToIntTable](substring(@inputarray, 4001, 8000))
...

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.