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Applies to:
SQL Server
Azure SQL Database
Azure SQL Managed Instance
Azure Synapse Analytics
Analytics Platform System (PDW)
SQL analytics endpoint in Microsoft Fabric
Warehouse in Microsoft Fabric
SQL database in Microsoft Fabric
The database object name is referred to as its identifier.
Servers, databases, and database objects, such as tables, views, columns, indexes, triggers, procedures, constraints, and rules, can have identifiers. Most objects require identifiers, but some objects, such as constraints, make them optional.
You create an object identifier when you define the object. Use the identifier to reference the object. For example, the following statement creates a table with the identifier TableX, and two columns with the identifiers KeyCol and Description:
CREATE TABLE TableX (
KeyCol INT PRIMARY KEY,
Description NVARCHAR(80)
);
This table also has an unnamed constraint. The primary key constraint has no identifier, and so would be assigned a system-generated name like PK__TableX__D7CB9CCCEEF0806C, which you could observe in system metadata views like sys.key_constraints.
Constraint names and other schema-scoped objects must be unique within a database schema. For example, two primary key constraints can't share a name. However, column names only need to be unique within each table, not within the schema.
The collation of an identifier depends on the level at which you define it.
- The default collation of the instance is assigned to identifiers of instance-level objects, such as logins and database names.
- The default collation of the database is assigned to identifiers of objects in a database, such as tables, views, and column names. For example, you can create two tables with names that differ only in case in a database that has case-sensitive collation, but you can't create them in a database that has case-insensitive collation.
Note
The names of variables, or the parameters of functions and stored procedures must comply with the rules for Transact-SQL identifiers.
Classes of identifiers
There are two classes of identifiers:
Regular identifiers comply with the rules for the format of identifiers. Regular identifiers aren't delimited when they're used in Transact-SQL statements.
USE AdventureWorks2022; GO SELECT * FROM HumanResources.Employee WHERE NationalIDNumber = 153479919;Delimited identifiers are enclosed in double quotation marks (
") or brackets ([and]). Identifiers that comply with the rules for the format of identifiers might not be delimited. For example:USE AdventureWorks2022; GO SELECT * FROM [HumanResources].[Employee] --Delimiter is optional. WHERE [NationalIDNumber] = 153479919 --Delimiter is optional.
Identifiers that don't comply with all the rules for identifiers must be delimited in a Transact-SQL statement. For example:
USE AdventureWorks2022;
GO
--Identifier contains a space and uses a reserved keyword.
CREATE TABLE [SalesOrderDetail Table] (
[Order] INT NOT NULL,
[SalesOrderDetailID] INT IDENTITY(1, 1) NOT NULL,
[OrderQty] SMALLINT NOT NULL,
[ProductID] INT NOT NULL,
[UnitPrice] MONEY NOT NULL,
[UnitPriceDiscount] MONEY NOT NULL,
[ModifiedDate] DATETIME NOT NULL,
CONSTRAINT [PK_SalesOrderDetail_Order_SalesOrderDetailID] PRIMARY KEY CLUSTERED (
[Order] ASC,
[SalesOrderDetailID] ASC
)
);
GO
SELECT *
FROM [SalesOrderDetail Table] --Identifier contains a space and uses a reserved keyword.
WHERE [Order] = 10; --Identifier is a reserved keyword.
Both regular and delimited identifiers must contain from 1 through 128 characters. For local temporary tables, the identifier can have a maximum of 116 characters.
Rules for regular identifiers
The names of variables, functions, and stored procedures must follow these rules for Transact-SQL identifiers.
The first character must be one of the following characters:
A letter as defined by the Unicode Standard 3.2. The Unicode definition of letters includes Latin characters from
athroughz, fromAthroughZ, and also letter characters from other languages.The underscore (
_), at sign (@), or number sign (#).Certain symbols at the beginning of an identifier have special meaning in SQL Server. A regular identifier that starts with the at sign always denotes a local variable or parameter and can't be used as the name of any other type of object. An identifier that starts with a number sign denotes a temporary table or procedure. An identifier that starts with double number signs (
##) denotes a global temporary object. Although the number sign or double number sign characters can be used to begin the names of other types of objects, we don't recommend this practice.Some Transact-SQL functions have names that start with double at signs (
@@). To avoid confusion with these functions, don't use names that start with@@.
Subsequent characters can include the following list:
Letters as defined in the Unicode Standard 3.2.
Decimal numbers from either Basic Latin or other national scripts.
The at sign (
@), dollar sign ($), number sign (#), or underscore (_).
The identifier must not be a Transact-SQL reserved word. SQL Server reserves both the uppercase and lowercase versions of reserved words. When you use identifiers in Transact-SQL statements, delimit identifiers that don't comply with these rules by using double quotation marks or brackets. The words that are reserved depend on the database compatibility level. Set the database compatibility level by using the ALTER DATABASE compatibility level statement.
Don't use embedded spaces or special characters.
Don't use Supplementary characters.
When you use identifiers in Transact-SQL statements, delimit identifiers that don't comply with these rules by using double quotation marks or brackets.
Some rules for the format of regular identifiers depend on the database compatibility level.
Catalog collation in Azure SQL Database
You can't change or set the logical server collation on Azure SQL Database. However, you can configure each database's collations separately for data in the database and for catalog. The catalog collation determines the collation for system metadata, such as object identifiers. You can specify both collations independently when you create the database in the Azure portal, in T-SQL with CREATE DATABASE, or in PowerShell with New-AzSqlDatabase.
For details and examples, see CREATE DATABASE. Specify a collation for the database (COLLATE) and a catalog collation for system metadata and object identifiers (CATALOG_COLLATION).
Catalog collation in SQL database in Microsoft Fabric
Currently, by default the collation of a SQL database in Fabric is SQL_Latin1_General_CP1_CI_AS, but this can be configured when deploying. The collation can't be updated after deployment. Collations on individual columns are supported. For more information on deployment options, see Options to create a SQL database in Fabric.