How can a column with a default value be added to an existing table in SQL Server 2000 / SQL Server 2005?
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and this one as well w3schools.com/sql/sql_alter.asp – Developer Jul 26 '16 at 23:10
Syntax:
ALTER TABLE {TABLENAME}
ADD {COLUMNNAME} {TYPE} {NULL|NOT NULL}
CONSTRAINT {CONSTRAINT_NAME} DEFAULT {DEFAULT_VALUE}
WITH VALUES
Example:
ALTER TABLE SomeTable
ADD SomeCol Bit NULL --Or NOT NULL.
CONSTRAINT D_SomeTable_SomeCol --When Omitted a Default-Constraint Name is autogenerated.
DEFAULT (0)--Optional Default-Constraint.
WITH VALUES --Add if Column is Nullable and you want the Default Value for Existing Records.
Notes:
Optional Constraint Name:
If you leave out CONSTRAINT D_SomeTable_SomeCol
then SQL Server will autogenerate
a Default-Contraint with a funny Name like: DF__SomeTa__SomeC__4FB7FEF6
Optional With-Values Statement:
The WITH VALUES
is only needed when your Column is Nullable
and you want the Default Value used for Existing Records.
If your Column is NOT NULL
, then it will automatically use the Default Value
for all Existing Records, whether you specify WITH VALUES
or not.
How Inserts work with a Default-Constraint:
If you insert a Record into SomeTable
and do not Specify SomeCol
's value, then it will Default to 0
.
If you insert a Record and Specify SomeCol
's value as NULL
(and your column allows nulls),
then the Default-Constraint will not be used and NULL
will be inserted as the Value.
Notes were based on everyone's great feedback below.
Special Thanks to:
@Yatrix, @WalterStabosz, @YahooSerious, and @StackMan for their Comments.
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325Keep in mind that if the column is nullable, then null will be the value used for existing rows. – Richard Collette Jan 31 '12 at 15:43
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17@Thecrocodilehunter Nullable column means that you can insert Null for the columns value. If it's not a nullable column, you have to insert some value of that data type. So, for existing records, Null will be inserted in them and in new records, your default value will be inserted unless otherwise specified. Make sense? – Yatrix Feb 29 '12 at 16:42
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40I like this answer a little better than dbugger's because it explicitly names the default constraint. A default constraint is still created using dbugger's syntax, except its name is auto-generated. Knowing the exact name is handy when writing DROP-CREATE scripts. – Walter Stabosz Mar 23 '12 at 12:43
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18@Vertigo That is ONLY true if the column is
NOT NULL
. Please try this:create table blah(a int not null primary key clustered); insert blah values (1), (2); alter table blah add b int null constraint df_blah_b default (0); select * from blah;
You will see 2 NULL values for columnb
. – ErikE Jun 14 '13 at 22:19 -
48Use
WITH VALUES
to update existing nullable rows. See MSDN: "If the added column allows null values andWITH VALUES
is specified, the default value is stored in the new column, added to existing rows." – Yahoo Serious Jul 28 '14 at 9:45
ALTER TABLE Protocols
ADD ProtocolTypeID int NOT NULL DEFAULT(1)
GO
The inclusion of the DEFAULT fills the column in existing rows with the default value, so the NOT NULL constraint is not violated.
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13The problem with that answer is that the default value is only valid for new records. Existing records will still have NULL value. – Roee Gavirel Nov 9 '11 at 10:22
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130You will find that is not the case. Otherwise the constraint would be violated. – dbugger Nov 9 '11 at 16:50
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34Columns in existing rows are filled with the default value. A little empirical test will prove it. – dbugger Nov 9 '11 at 16:57
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79Just to clarify - if "NOT NULL" is omitted from the command, the value for existing rows will NOT be updated and will remain NULL. If "NOT NULL" is included in the command, the value for existing rows WILL be updated to match the default. – Stack Man Aug 14 '12 at 22:11
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15For multiple columns ALTER TABLE table_1 ADD col_1 int NOT NULL DEFAULT(1), col_2 int NULL – aads Sep 4 '13 at 5:25
When adding a nullable column, WITH VALUES
will ensure that the specific DEFAULT value is applied to existing rows:
ALTER TABLE table
ADD column BIT -- Demonstration with NULL-able column added
CONSTRAINT Constraint_name DEFAULT 0 WITH VALUES
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12This is a key point. It's easy to assume a column with a
DEFAULT
constraint will always have a value - that is, not be NULL, even thoughNOT NULL
isn't specified. – Bill Brinkley Nov 27 '12 at 19:29 -
6@tkocmathla uh, I was not talking about the
BIT
datatype, I was talking about this particularBIT
column. Look at the answer, the column is declared asNOT NULL
. – rsenna Aug 20 '14 at 19:57
ALTER TABLE <table name>
ADD <new column name> <data type> NOT NULL
GO
ALTER TABLE <table name>
ADD CONSTRAINT <constraint name> DEFAULT <default value> FOR <new column name>
GO
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7This won't work if the table already has content because the new "not nullable" column is created before the default value constraint – WDuffy May 16 '16 at 14:16
ALTER TABLE MYTABLE ADD MYNEWCOLUMN VARCHAR(200) DEFAULT 'SNUGGLES'
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13
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5@baaroz , this works with NOT NULL: ALTER TABLE MYTABLE ADD MYNEWCOLUMN VARCHAR(200) NOT NULL DEFAULT 'SNUGGLES' – stom Feb 22 '15 at 9:59
Beware when the column you are adding has a NOT NULL
constraint, yet does not have a DEFAULT
constraint (value). The ALTER TABLE
statement will fail in that case if the table has any rows in it. The solution is to either remove the NOT NULL
constraint from the new column, or provide a DEFAULT
constraint for it.
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2
The most basic version with two lines only
ALTER TABLE MyTable
ADD MyNewColumn INT NOT NULL DEFAULT 0
Use:
-- Add a column with a default DateTime
-- to capture when each record is added.
ALTER TABLE myTableName
ADD RecordAddedDate smalldatetime NULL DEFAULT(GetDate())
GO
If you want to add multiple columns you can do it this way for example:
ALTER TABLE YourTable
ADD Column1 INT NOT NULL DEFAULT 0,
Column2 INT NOT NULL DEFAULT 1,
Column3 VARCHAR(50) DEFAULT 'Hello'
GO
Use:
ALTER TABLE {TABLENAME}
ADD {COLUMNNAME} {TYPE} {NULL|NOT NULL}
CONSTRAINT {CONSTRAINT_NAME} DEFAULT {DEFAULT_VALUE}
Reference: ALTER TABLE (Transact-SQL) (MSDN)
You can do the thing with T-SQL in the following way.
ALTER TABLE {TABLENAME}
ADD {COLUMNNAME} {TYPE} {NULL|NOT NULL}
CONSTRAINT {CONSTRAINT_NAME} DEFAULT {DEFAULT_VALUE}
As well as you can use SQL Server Management Studio also by right clicking table in the Design menu, setting the default value to table.
And furthermore, if you want to add the same column (if it does not exists) to all tables in database, then use:
USE AdventureWorks;
EXEC sp_msforeachtable
'PRINT ''ALTER TABLE ? ADD Date_Created DATETIME DEFAULT GETDATE();''' ;
In SQL Server 2008-R2, I go to the design mode - in a test database - and add my two columns using the designer and made the settings with the GUI, and then the infamous Right-Click gives the option "Generate Change Script"!
Bang up pops a little window with, you guessed it, the properly formatted guaranteed-to-work change script. Hit the easy button.
To add a column to an existing database table with a default value, we can use:
ALTER TABLE [dbo.table_name]
ADD [Column_Name] BIT NOT NULL
Default ( 0 )
Here is another way to add a column to an existing database table with a default value.
A much more thorough SQL script to add a column with a default value is below including checking if the column exists before adding it also checkin the constraint and dropping it if there is one. This script also names the constraint so we can have a nice naming convention (I like DF_) and if not SQL will give us a constraint with a name which has a randomly generated number; so it's nice to be able to name the constraint too.
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-- Drop COLUMN
-- Name of Column: Column_EmployeeName
-- Name of Table: table_Emplyee
--------------------------------------------------------------------------
IF EXISTS (
SELECT 1
FROM INFORMATION_SCHEMA.COLUMNS
WHERE TABLE_NAME = 'table_Emplyee'
AND COLUMN_NAME = 'Column_EmployeeName'
)
BEGIN
IF EXISTS ( SELECT 1
FROM sys.default_constraints
WHERE object_id = OBJECT_ID('[dbo].[DF_table_Emplyee_Column_EmployeeName]')
AND parent_object_id = OBJECT_ID('[dbo].[table_Emplyee]')
)
BEGIN
------ DROP Contraint
ALTER TABLE [dbo].[table_Emplyee] DROP CONSTRAINT [DF_table_Emplyee_Column_EmployeeName]
PRINT '[DF_table_Emplyee_Column_EmployeeName] was dropped'
END
-- ----- DROP Column -----------------------------------------------------------------
ALTER TABLE [dbo].table_Emplyee
DROP COLUMN Column_EmployeeName
PRINT 'Column Column_EmployeeName in images table was dropped'
END
--------------------------------------------------------------------------
-- ADD COLUMN Column_EmployeeName IN table_Emplyee table
--------------------------------------------------------------------------
IF NOT EXISTS (
SELECT 1
FROM INFORMATION_SCHEMA.COLUMNS
WHERE TABLE_NAME = 'table_Emplyee'
AND COLUMN_NAME = 'Column_EmployeeName'
)
BEGIN
----- ADD Column & Contraint
ALTER TABLE dbo.table_Emplyee
ADD Column_EmployeeName BIT NOT NULL
CONSTRAINT [DF_table_Emplyee_Column_EmployeeName] DEFAULT (0)
PRINT 'Column [DF_table_Emplyee_Column_EmployeeName] in table_Emplyee table was Added'
PRINT 'Contraint [DF_table_Emplyee_Column_EmployeeName] was Added'
END
GO
These are two ways to add a column to an existing database table with a default value.
Alternatively, you can add a default without having to explicitly name the constraint:
ALTER TABLE [schema].[tablename] ADD DEFAULT ((0)) FOR [columnname]
If you have an issue with existing default constraints when creating this constraint then they can be removed by:
alter table [schema].[tablename] drop constraint [constraintname]
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1FYI, explicitly naming the constraint using a standard naming scheme (e.g. "DF_Table_Column"), for ease of maintenance. Otherwise, locating the constraint requires more work. – Mike Christian Nov 22 '17 at 0:15
This can be done in the SSMS GUI as well. I show a default date below but the default value can be whatever, of course.
- Put your table in design view (Right click on the table in object explorer->Design)
- Add a column to the table (or click on the column you want to update if it already exists)
- In Column Properties below, enter
(getdate())
orabc
or0
or whatever value you want in Default Value or Binding field as pictured below:
ALTER TABLE ADD ColumnName {Column_Type} Constraint
The MSDN article ALTER TABLE (Transact-SQL) has all of the alter table syntax.
First create a table with name student:
CREATE TABLE STUDENT (STUDENT_ID INT NOT NULL)
Add one column to it:
ALTER TABLE STUDENT
ADD STUDENT_NAME INT NOT NULL DEFAULT(0)
SELECT *
FROM STUDENT
The table is created and a column is added to an existing table with a default value.
SQL Server + Alter Table + Add Column + Default Value uniqueidentifier
ALTER TABLE Product
ADD ReferenceID uniqueidentifier not null
default (cast(cast(0 as binary) as uniqueidentifier))
IF NOT EXISTS (
SELECT * FROM INFORMATION_SCHEMA.COLUMNS
WHERE TABLE_NAME ='TABLENAME' AND COLUMN_NAME = 'COLUMNNAME'
)
BEGIN
ALTER TABLE TABLENAME ADD COLUMNNAME Nvarchar(MAX) Not Null default
END
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3I like the
NOT EXISTS
check before attempting to alter the table. Very good solution. Some additional commentary on how this works would make it even more useful. – Michael Gaskill Jun 21 '16 at 20:14
This has a lot of answers, but I feel the need to add this extended method. This seems a lot longer, but it is extremely useful if you're adding a NOT NULL field to a table with millions of rows in an active database.
ALTER TABLE {schemaName}.{tableName}
ADD {columnName} {datatype} NULL
CONSTRAINT {constraintName} DEFAULT {DefaultValue}
UPDATE {schemaName}.{tableName}
SET {columnName} = {DefaultValue}
WHERE {columName} IS NULL
ALTER TABLE {schemaName}.{tableName}
ALTER COLUMN {columnName} {datatype} NOT NULL
What this will do is add the column as a nullable field and with the default value, update all fields to the default value (or you can assign more meaningful values), and finally it will change the column to be NOT NULL.
The reason for this is if you update a large scale table and add a new not null field it has to write to every single row and hereby will lock out the entire table as it adds the column and then writes all the values.
This method will add the nullable column which operates a lot faster by itself, then fills the data before setting the not null status.
I've found that doing the entire thing in one statement will lock out one of our more active tables for 4-8 minutes and quite often I have killed the process. This method each part usually takes only a few seconds and causes minimal locking.
Additionally, if you have a table in the area of billions of rows it may be worth batching the update like so:
WHILE 1=1
BEGIN
UPDATE TOP (1000000) {schemaName}.{tableName}
SET {columnName} = {DefaultValue}
WHERE {columName} IS NULL
IF @@ROWCOUNT < 1000000
BREAK;
END
--Adding Value with Default Value
ALTER TABLE TestTable
ADD ThirdCol INT NOT NULL DEFAULT(0)
GO
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Maybe replace the image with actual code? Hard to copy and paste as-is. – David Faber Mar 20 '18 at 16:06
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5This does not add any value over the already existing answers from years ago. – nvoigt Apr 15 '18 at 8:01
Add a new column to a table:
ALTER TABLE [table]
ADD Column1 Datatype
For example,
ALTER TABLE [test]
ADD ID Int
If the user wants to make it auto incremented then:
ALTER TABLE [test]
ADD ID Int IDENTITY(1,1) NOT NULL
This can be done by the below code.
CREATE TABLE TestTable
(FirstCol INT NOT NULL)
GO
------------------------------
-- Option 1
------------------------------
-- Adding New Column
ALTER TABLE TestTable
ADD SecondCol INT
GO
-- Updating it with Default
UPDATE TestTable
SET SecondCol = 0
GO
-- Alter
ALTER TABLE TestTable
ALTER COLUMN SecondCol INT NOT NULL
GO
This is for SQL Server:
ALTER TABLE TableName
ADD ColumnName (type) -- NULL OR NOT NULL
DEFAULT (default value)
WITH VALUES
Example:
ALTER TABLE Activities
ADD status int NOT NULL DEFAULT (0)
WITH VALUES
If you want to add constraints then:
ALTER TABLE Table_1
ADD row3 int NOT NULL
CONSTRAINT CONSTRAINT_NAME DEFAULT (0)
WITH VALUES
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7This does not add any value over the already existing answers from years ago. – nvoigt Apr 15 '18 at 8:01
ALTER TABLE tbl_table ADD int_column int NOT NULL DEFAULT(0)
From this query you can add a column of datatype integer with default value 0.
If the default is Null, then:
- In SQL Server, open the tree of the targeted table
- Right click "Columns" ==>
New Column
- Type the column Name,
Select Type
, and Check the Allow Nulls Checkbox - From the Menu Bar, click
Save
Done!
Well, I now have some modification to my previous answer. I have noticed that none of the answers mentioned IF NOT EXISTS
. So I am going to provide a new solution of it as I have faced some problems altering the table.
IF NOT EXISTS (SELECT * FROM INFORMATION_SCHEMA.columns WHERE table_name = 'TaskSheet' AND column_name = 'IsBilledToClient')
BEGIN
ALTER TABLE dbo.TaskSheet ADD
IsBilledToClient bit NOT NULL DEFAULT ((1))
END
GO
Here TaskSheet
is the particular table name and IsBilledToClient
is the new column which you are going to insert and 1
the default value. That means in the new column what will be the value of the existing rows, therefore one will be set automatically there. However, you can change as you wish with the respect of the column type like I have used BIT
, so I put in default value 1.
I suggest the above system, because I have faced a problem. So what is the problem? The problem is, if the IsBilledToClient
column does exists in the table table then if you execute only the portion of the code given below you will see an error in the SQL server Query builder. But if it does not exist then for the first time there will be no error when executing.
ALTER TABLE {TABLENAME}
ADD {COLUMNNAME} {TYPE} {NULL|NOT NULL}
CONSTRAINT {CONSTRAINT_NAME} DEFAULT {DEFAULT_VALUE}
[WITH VALUES]