Επεξεργασία

Κοινή χρήση μέσω


SET QUOTED_IDENTIFIER (Transact-SQL)

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

Causes SQL Server to follow the ISO rules regarding quotation mark delimiting identifiers and literal strings. Identifiers delimited by double quotation marks can be either Transact-SQL reserved keywords or can contain characters not generally allowed by the Transact-SQL syntax rules for identifiers.

Transact-SQL syntax conventions

Syntax

Syntax for SQL Server, Azure SQL Database, serverless SQL pool in Azure Synapse Analytics, and Microsoft Fabric.

SET QUOTED_IDENTIFIER { ON | OFF }

Syntax for Azure Synapse Analytics and Parallel Data Warehouse.

SET QUOTED_IDENTIFIER ON

Remarks

When SET QUOTED_IDENTIFIER is ON (default), identifiers can be delimited by double quotation marks (""), and literals must be delimited by single quotation marks (''). All strings delimited by double quotation marks are interpreted as object identifiers. Quoted identifiers don't have to follow the Transact-SQL rules for identifiers. They can be keywords and can include characters that aren't allowed in Transact-SQL identifiers. If a double quotation mark (") is part of the identifier, it can be represented by two double quotation marks (""). SET QUOTED_IDENTIFIER must be ON when reserved keywords are used for object names in the database.

When SET QUOTED_IDENTIFIER is OFF, identifiers can't be quoted and must follow all Transact-SQL rules for identifiers. For more information, see Database identifiers. Literals can be delimited by either single or double quotation marks. If a literal string is delimited by double quotation marks, the string can contain embedded single quotation marks, such as apostrophes.

Note

QUOTED_IDENTIFIER doesn't affect delimited identifiers enclosed in brackets ([ and ]).

SET QUOTED_IDENTIFIER must be ON when you're creating or changing indexes on computed columns or indexed views. If SET QUOTED_IDENTIFIER is OFF, then CREATE, UPDATE, INSERT, and DELETE statements fail on tables with indexes on computed columns, or tables with indexed views. For more information about required SET option settings with indexed views and indexes on computed columns, see Considerations when you use the SET statements.

SET QUOTED_IDENTIFIER must be ON when you're creating a filtered index.

SET QUOTED_IDENTIFIER must be ON when you invoke xml data type methods.

The SQL Server Native Client ODBC driver and SQL Server Native Client OLE DB Provider for SQL Server automatically set QUOTED_IDENTIFIER to ON when connecting. This can be configured in ODBC data sources, in ODBC connection attributes, or OLE DB connection properties. The default for SET QUOTED_IDENTIFIER is OFF for connections from DB-Library applications.

When a table is created, the QUOTED IDENTIFIER option is always stored as ON in the table's metadata even if the option is set to OFF when the table is created.

When a stored procedure is created, the SET QUOTED_IDENTIFIER and SET ANSI_NULLS settings are captured and used for subsequent invocations of that stored procedure.

When executed inside a stored procedure, the setting of SET QUOTED_IDENTIFIER isn't changed.

When SET ANSI_DEFAULTS is ON, QUOTED_IDENTIFIER is also ON.

SET QUOTED_IDENTIFIER corresponds to the QUOTED_IDENTIFIER setting of ALTER DATABASE.

SET QUOTED_IDENTIFIER takes effect at Transact-SQL parse-time and only affects parsing, not query optimization or query execution.

For a top-level ad hoc batch, parsing begins using the session's current setting for QUOTED_IDENTIFIER. As the batch is parsed any occurrence of SET QUOTED_IDENTIFIER changes the parsing behavior from that point on, and save that setting for the session. So after the batch is parsed and executed, the session's QUOTED_IDENTIFIER setting will be set according to the last occurrence of SET QUOTED_IDENTIFIER in the batch.

Static Transact-SQL in a stored procedure is parsed using the QUOTED_IDENTIFIER setting in effect for the batch that created or altered the stored procedure. SET QUOTED_IDENTIFIER has no effect when it appears in the body of a stored procedure as static Transact-SQL.

For a nested batch using sp_executesql or exec(), the parsing begins using the QUOTED_IDENTIFIER setting of the session. If the nested batch is inside a stored procedure, parsing starts using the QUOTED_IDENTIFIER setting of the stored procedure. As the nested batch is parsed, any occurrence of SET QUOTED_IDENTIFIER changes the parsing behavior from that point on, but the session's QUOTED_IDENTIFIER setting isn't updated.

To view the current setting for this setting, run the following query:

DECLARE @QUOTED_IDENTIFIER VARCHAR(3) = 'OFF';

IF ((256 & @@OPTIONS) = 256)
BEGIN
    SET @QUOTED_IDENTIFIER = 'ON';
END

SELECT @QUOTED_IDENTIFIER AS QUOTED_IDENTIFIER;

Permissions

Requires membership in the public role.

Examples

A. Use the quoted identifier setting and reserved word object names

The following example shows that the SET QUOTED_IDENTIFIER setting must be ON, and the keywords in table names must be in double quotation marks to create and use objects that have reserved keyword names.

SET QUOTED_IDENTIFIER OFF
GO

-- Create statement fails.
CREATE TABLE "select" ("identity" INT IDENTITY NOT NULL, "order" INT NOT NULL);
GO

SET QUOTED_IDENTIFIER ON;
GO

-- Create statement succeeds.
CREATE TABLE "select" ("identity" INT IDENTITY NOT NULL, "order" INT NOT NULL);
GO

SELECT "identity","order"
FROM "select"
ORDER BY "order";
GO

DROP TABLE "SELECT";
GO

SET QUOTED_IDENTIFIER OFF;
GO

B. Use the quoted identifier setting with single and double quotation marks

The following example shows the way single and double quotation marks are used in string expressions with SET QUOTED_IDENTIFIER set to ON and OFF.

SET QUOTED_IDENTIFIER OFF;
GO

USE AdventureWorks2022;
GO

IF EXISTS(SELECT TABLE_NAME FROM INFORMATION_SCHEMA.TABLES
    WHERE TABLE_NAME = 'Test')
    DROP TABLE dbo.Test;
GO

USE AdventureWorks2022;
CREATE TABLE dbo.Test (ID INT, String VARCHAR(30));
GO

-- Literal strings can be in single or double quotation marks.
INSERT INTO dbo.Test VALUES (1, "'Text in single quotes'");
INSERT INTO dbo.Test VALUES (2, '''Text in single quotes''');
INSERT INTO dbo.Test VALUES (3, 'Text with 2 '''' single quotes');
INSERT INTO dbo.Test VALUES (4, '"Text in double quotes"');
INSERT INTO dbo.Test VALUES (5, """Text in double quotes""");
INSERT INTO dbo.Test VALUES (6, "Text with 2 """" double quotes");
GO

SET QUOTED_IDENTIFIER ON;
GO

-- Strings inside double quotation marks are now treated
-- as object names, so they cannot be used for literals.
INSERT INTO dbo."Test" VALUES (7, 'Text with a single '' quote');
GO

-- Object identifiers do not have to be in double quotation marks
-- if they are not reserved keywords.
SELECT ID, String
FROM dbo.Test;
GO

DROP TABLE dbo.Test;
GO

SET QUOTED_IDENTIFIER OFF;
GO

Here's the result set.

 ID          String
 ----------- ------------------------------
 1           'Text in single quotes'
 2           'Text in single quotes'
 3           Text with 2 '' single quotes
 4           "Text in double quotes"
 5           "Text in double quotes"
 6           Text with 2 "" double quotes
 7           Text with a single ' quote