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Create Tables (Database Engine)

You can create a table, name it, and add it to an existing database in SQL Server 2012 by using SQL Server Management Studio or Transact-SQL.

Note

If you are connected to a Windows Azure SQL Database, the new table option launches a create table template script. To create a table, edit the parameters and then run the script. For more information, see Windows Azure SQL Database Overview.

In This Topic

  • Before you begin:

    Security

  • To create a table, using:

    SQL Server Management Studio

    Transact-SQL

Before You Begin

Security

Permissions

Requires CREATE TABLE permission in the database and ALTER permission on the schema in which the table is being created.

If any columns in the CREATE TABLE statement are defined as a CLR user-defined type, either ownership of the type or REFERENCES permission on it is required.

If any columns in the CREATE TABLE statement have an XML schema collection associated with them, either ownership of the XML schema collection or REFERENCES permission on it is required.

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Using SQL Server Management Studio

To create a table with Table Designer

  1. In Object Explorer, connect to the instance of Database Engine that contains the database to be modified.

  2. In Object Explorer, expand the Databases node and then expand the database that will contain the new table.

  3. In Object Explorer, right-click the Tables node of your database and then click New Table.

  4. Type column names, choose data types, and choose whether to allow nulls for each column as shown in the following illustration.

    New columns with data types are added to a table.

  5. To specify more properties for a column, such as identity or computed column values, click the column and in the column properties tab, choose the appropriate properties. For more information about column properties, see Table Column Properties (SQL Server Management Studio).

  6. To specify a column as a primary key, right-click the column and select Set Primary Key. For more information, see Create Primary Keys.

  7. To create foreign key relationships, check constraints, or indexes, right-click in the Table Designer pane and select an object from the list as shown in the following illustration.

    Add foreign keys or indexes to a table.

    For more information about these objects, see Create Foreign Key Relationships, Create Check Constraints and Indexes.

  8. By default, the table is contained in the dbo schema. To specify a different schema for the table, right-click in the Table Designer pane and select Properties as shown in the following illustration. From the Schema drop-down list, select the appropriate schema.

    Specify a schema for the table.

    For more information about schemas, see Create a Database Schema.

  9. From the File menu, choose Save table name.

  10. In the Choose Name dialog box, type a name for the table and click OK.

  11. To view the new table, in Object Explorer, expand the Tables node and press F5 to refresh the list of objects. The new table is displayed in the list of tables.

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Using Transact-SQL

To create a table in the Query Editor

  1. In Object Explorer, connect to an instance of Database Engine.

  2. On the Standard bar, click New Query.

  3. Copy and paste the following example into the query window and click Execute.

    CREATE TABLE dbo.PurchaseOrderDetail
    (
        PurchaseOrderID int NOT NULL,
        LineNumber smallint NOT NULL,
        ProductID int NULL,
        UnitPrice money NULL,
        OrderQty smallint NULL,
        ReceivedQty float NULL,
        RejectedQty float NULL,
        DueDate datetime NULL,
    );
    

For more examples, see CREATE TABLE (Transact-SQL).

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