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CREATE FUNCTION (Transact-SQL)

Applies to: SQL Server Azure SQL Database Azure SQL Managed Instance

Creates a user-defined function (UDF), which is a Transact-SQL or common language runtime (CLR) routine. A user-defined function accepts parameters, performs an action such as a complex calculation, and returns the result of that action as a value. The return value can either be a scalar (single) value or a table. Use this statement to create a reusable routine that can be used in these ways:

  • In Transact-SQL statements such as SELECT
  • In applications that call the function
  • In the definition of another user-defined function
  • To parameterize a view or improve the functionality of an indexed view
  • To define a column in a table
  • To define a CHECK constraint on a column
  • To replace a stored procedure
  • Use an inline function as a filter predicate for a security policy

The integration of .NET Framework CLR into SQL Server is discussed in this article. CLR integration doesn't apply to Azure SQL Database.

For Azure Synapse Analytics or Microsoft Fabric, see CREATE FUNCTION (Azure Synapse Analytics and Microsoft Fabric).

Transact-SQL syntax conventions

Syntax

Syntax for Transact-SQL scalar functions.

CREATE [ OR ALTER ] FUNCTION [ schema_name. ] function_name
( [ { @parameter_name [ AS ] [ type_schema_name. ] parameter_data_type [ NULL ]
 [ = default ] [ READONLY ] }
    [ , ...n ]
  ]
)
RETURNS return_data_type
    [ WITH <function_option> [ , ...n ] ]
    [ AS ]
    BEGIN
        function_body
        RETURN scalar_expression
    END
[ ; ]

Syntax for Transact-SQL inline table-valued functions.

CREATE [ OR ALTER ] FUNCTION [ schema_name. ] function_name
( [ { @parameter_name [ AS ] [ type_schema_name. ] parameter_data_type [ NULL ]
    [ = default ] [ READONLY ] }
    [ , ...n ]
  ]
)
RETURNS TABLE
    [ WITH <function_option> [ , ...n ] ]
    [ AS ]
    RETURN [ ( ] select_stmt [ ) ]
[ ; ]

Syntax for Transact-SQL multi-statement table-valued functions.

CREATE [ OR ALTER ] FUNCTION [ schema_name. ] function_name
( [ { @parameter_name [ AS ] [ type_schema_name. ] parameter_data_type [ NULL ]
    [ = default ] [ READONLY ] }
    [ , ...n ]
  ]
)
RETURNS @return_variable TABLE <table_type_definition>
    [ WITH <function_option> [ , ...n ] ]
    [ AS ]
    BEGIN
        function_body
        RETURN
    END
[ ; ]

Syntax for Transact-SQL function clauses.

<function_option> ::=
{
    [ ENCRYPTION ]
  | [ SCHEMABINDING ]
  | [ RETURNS NULL ON NULL INPUT | CALLED ON NULL INPUT ]
  | [ EXECUTE_AS_Clause ]
  | [ INLINE = { ON | OFF } ]
}

<table_type_definition> ::=
( { <column_definition> <column_constraint>
  | <computed_column_definition> }
    [ <table_constraint> ] [ , ...n ]
)
<column_definition> ::=
{
    { column_name data_type }
    [ [ DEFAULT constant_expression ]
      [ COLLATE collation_name ] | [ ROWGUIDCOL ]
    ]
    | [ IDENTITY [ (seed , increment ) ] ]
    [ <column_constraint> [ ...n ] ]
}

<column_constraint> ::=
{
    [ NULL | NOT NULL ]
    { PRIMARY KEY | UNIQUE }
      [ CLUSTERED | NONCLUSTERED ]
      [ WITH FILLFACTOR = fillfactor
        | WITH ( <index_option> [ , ...n ] )
      [ ON { filegroup | "default" } ] ]
  | [ CHECK ( logical_expression ) ] [ , ...n ]
}

<computed_column_definition> ::=
column_name AS computed_column_expression

<table_constraint> ::=
{
    { PRIMARY KEY | UNIQUE }
      [ CLUSTERED | NONCLUSTERED ]
      ( column_name [ ASC | DESC ] [ , ...n ]
        [ WITH FILLFACTOR = fillfactor
        | WITH ( <index_option> [ , ...n ] )
  | [ CHECK ( logical_expression ) ] [ , ...n ]
}

<index_option> ::=
{
    PAD_INDEX = { ON | OFF }
  | FILLFACTOR = fillfactor
  | IGNORE_DUP_KEY = { ON | OFF }
  | STATISTICS_NORECOMPUTE = { ON | OFF }
  | ALLOW_ROW_LOCKS = { ON | OFF }
  | ALLOW_PAGE_LOCKS = { ON | OFF }
}

Syntax for CLR scalar functions.

CREATE [ OR ALTER ] FUNCTION [ schema_name. ] function_name
( { @parameter_name [ AS ] [ type_schema_name. ] parameter_data_type [ NULL ]
    [ = default ] }
    [ , ...n ]
)
RETURNS { return_data_type }
    [ WITH <clr_function_option> [ , ...n ] ]
    [ AS ] EXTERNAL NAME <method_specifier>
[ ; ]

Syntax for CLR table-valued functions.

CREATE [ OR ALTER ] FUNCTION [ schema_name. ] function_name
( { @parameter_name [ AS ] [ type_schema_name. ] parameter_data_type [ NULL ]
    [ = default ] }
    [ , ...n ]
)
RETURNS TABLE <clr_table_type_definition>
    [ WITH <clr_function_option> [ , ...n ] ]
    [ ORDER ( <order_clause> ) ]
    [ AS ] EXTERNAL NAME <method_specifier>
[ ; ]

Syntax for CLR function clauses.

<order_clause> ::=
{
   <column_name_in_clr_table_type_definition>
   [ ASC | DESC ]
} [ , ...n ]

<method_specifier> ::=
    assembly_name.class_name.method_name

<clr_function_option> ::=
{
    [ RETURNS NULL ON NULL INPUT | CALLED ON NULL INPUT ]
  | [ EXECUTE_AS_Clause ]
}

<clr_table_type_definition> ::=
( { column_name data_type } [ , ...n ] )

In-memory OLTP syntax for natively compiled, scalar user-defined functions.

CREATE [ OR ALTER ] FUNCTION [ schema_name. ] function_name
 ( [ { @parameter_name [ AS ] [ type_schema_name. ] parameter_data_type
    [ NULL | NOT NULL ] [ = default ] [ READONLY ] }
    [ , ...n ]
  ]
)
RETURNS return_data_type
     WITH <function_option> [ , ...n ]
    [ AS ]
    BEGIN ATOMIC WITH (set_option [ , ... n ] )
        function_body
        RETURN scalar_expression
    END

<function_option> ::=
{
  |  NATIVE_COMPILATION
  |  SCHEMABINDING
  | [ EXECUTE_AS_Clause ]
  | [ RETURNS NULL ON NULL INPUT | CALLED ON NULL INPUT ]
}

Arguments

OR ALTER

Applies to: SQL Server 2016 (13.x) SP 1 and later versions, and Azure SQL Database.

Conditionally alters the function only if it already exists.

Optional OR ALTER syntax is available for CLR, starting with SQL Server 2016 (13.x) SP 1 CU 1.

schema_name

The name of the schema to which the user-defined function belongs.

function_name

The name of the user-defined function. Function names must comply with the rules for identifiers and must be unique within the database and to its schema.

Parentheses are required after the function name, even if a parameter isn't specified.

@parameter_name

A parameter in the user-defined function. One or more parameters can be declared.

A function can have a maximum of 2,100 parameters. The value of each declared parameter must be supplied by the user when the function is executed, unless a default for the parameter is defined.

Specify a parameter name by using an at sign (@) as the first character. The parameter name must comply with the rules for identifiers. Parameters are local to the function; the same parameter names can be used in other functions. Parameters can take the place only of constants; they can't be used instead of table names, column names, or the names of other database objects.

ANSI_WARNINGS isn't honored when you pass parameters in a stored procedure, user-defined function, or when you declare and set variables in a batch statement. For example, if a variable is defined as char(3), and then set to a value larger than three characters, the data is truncated to the defined size and the INSERT or UPDATE statement succeeds.

[ type_schema_name. ] parameter_data_type

The parameter data type, and optionally the schema to which it belongs. For Transact-SQL functions, all data types, including CLR user-defined types and user-defined table types, are allowed except the timestamp data type. For CLR functions, all data types, including CLR user-defined types, are allowed except text, ntext, image, user-defined table types, and timestamp data types. The nonscalar types, cursor and table, can't be specified as a parameter data type in either Transact-SQL or CLR functions.

If type_schema_name isn't specified, the Database Engine looks for the scalar_parameter_data_type in the following order:

  • The schema that contains the names of SQL Server system data types.
  • The default schema of the current user in the current database.
  • The dbo schema in the current database.

[ = default ]

A default value for the parameter. If a default value is defined, the function can be executed without specifying a value for that parameter.

Default parameter values can be specified for CLR functions, except for the varchar(max) and varbinary(max) data types.

When a parameter of the function has a default value, the keyword DEFAULT must be specified when the function is called to retrieve the default value. This behavior is different from using parameters with default values in stored procedures in which omitting the parameter also implies the default value. However, the DEFAULT keyword isn't required when invoking a scalar function by using the EXECUTE statement.

READONLY

Indicates that the parameter can't be updated or modified within the definition of the function. READONLY is required for user-defined table type parameters (TVPs), and can't be used for any other parameter type.

return_data_type

The return value of a scalar user-defined function. For Transact-SQL functions, all data types, including CLR user-defined types, are allowed except the timestamp data type. For CLR functions, all data types, including CLR user-defined types, are allowed except the text, ntext, image, and timestamp data types. The nonscalar types, cursor and table, can't be specified as a return data type in either Transact-SQL or CLR functions.

function_body

Specifies that a series of Transact-SQL statements, which together don't produce a side effect such as modifying a table, define the value of the function. function_body is used only in scalar functions and multi-statement table-valued functions (MSTVFs).

In scalar functions, function_body is a series of Transact-SQL statements that together evaluate to a scalar value.

In MSTVFs, function_body is a series of Transact-SQL statements that populate a TABLE return variable.

scalar_expression

Specifies the scalar value that the scalar function returns.

TABLE

Specifies that the return value of the table-valued function (TVF) is a table. Only constants and @local_variables can be passed to TVFs.

In inline TVFs, the TABLE return value is defined through a single SELECT statement. Inline functions don't have associated return variables.

In MSTVFs, @return_variable is a TABLE variable, used to store and accumulate the rows that should be returned as the value of the function. @return_variable can be specified only for Transact-SQL functions and not for CLR functions.

select_stmt

The single SELECT statement that defines the return value of an inline table-valued function (TVF).

ORDER (<order_clause>)

Specifies the order in which results are being returned from the table-valued function. For more information, see the section, Use sort order in CLR table-valued functions later in this article.

EXTERNAL NAME <method_specifier> assembly_name.class_name.method_name

Applies to: SQL Server 2008 (10.0.x) SP 1 and later versions.

Specifies the assembly and method to which the created function name shall refer.

  • assembly_name - must match a value in the name column of SELECT * FROM sys.assemblies;.

    The name that was used on the CREATE ASSEMBLY statement.

  • class_name - must match a value in the assembly_name column of SELECT * FROM sys.assembly_modules;.

    Often the value contains an embedded period or dot. In such cases, the Transact-SQL syntax requires that the value is bounded with a pair of square brackets ([]), or with a pair of double quotation marks ("").

  • method_name - must match a value in the method_name column of SELECT * FROM sys.assembly_modules;.

    The method must be static.

In a typical example for MyFood.dll, in which all types are in the MyFood namespace, the EXTERNAL NAME value could be MyFood.[MyFood.MyClass].MyStaticMethod.

By default, SQL Server can't execute CLR code. You can create, modify, and drop database objects that reference common language runtime modules. However, you can't execute these references in SQL Server until you enable the clr enabled option. To enable this option, use sp_configure. This option isn't available in a contained database.

<table_type_definition> ( { <column_definition> <column_constraint | <computed_column_definition> } [ <table_constraint> ] [ , ...n ] )

Defines the table data type for a Transact-SQL function. The table declaration includes column definitions and column or table constraints. The table is always put in the primary filegroup.

<clr_table_type_definition> ( { column_namedata_type } [ , ...n ] )

Applies to: SQL Server 2008 (10.0.x) SP 1 and later versions, and Azure SQL Database (Preview in some regions).

Defines the table data types for a CLR function. The table declaration includes only column names and data types. The table is always put in the primary filegroup.

NULL | NOT NULL

Supported only for natively compiled, scalar user-defined functions. For more information, see Scalar User-Defined Functions for In-Memory OLTP.

NATIVE_COMPILATION

Indicates whether a user-defined function is natively compiled. This argument is required for natively compiled, scalar user-defined functions.

BEGIN ATOMIC WITH

Required, and only supported, for natively compiled scalar user-defined functions. For more information, see Atomic Blocks in Native Procedures.

SCHEMABINDING

The SCHEMABINDING argument is required for natively compiled, scalar user-defined functions.

EXECUTE AS

EXECUTE AS is required for natively compiled, scalar user-defined functions.

<function_option> ::= and <clr_function_option> ::=

Specifies that the function has one or more of the following options.

ENCRYPTION

Applies to: SQL Server 2008 (10.0.x) SP 1 and later versions.

Indicates that the Database Engine converts the original text of the CREATE FUNCTION statement to an obfuscated format. The output of the obfuscation isn't directly visible in any catalog views. Users that have no access to system tables or database files can't retrieve the obfuscated text. However, the text is available to privileged users that can either access system tables over the Diagnostic connection for database administrators or directly access database files. Also, users that can attach a debugger to the server process can retrieve the original procedure from memory at runtime. For more information about accessing system metadata, see Metadata Visibility Configuration.

Using this option prevents the function from being published as part of SQL Server replication. This option can't be specified for CLR functions.

SCHEMABINDING

Specifies that the function is bound to the database objects that it references. When SCHEMABINDING is specified, the base objects can't be modified in a way that would affect the function definition. The function definition itself must first be modified or dropped to remove dependencies on the object that is to be modified.

The binding of the function to the objects it references is removed only when ne of the following actions occurs:

  • The function is dropped.
  • The function is modified by using the ALTER statement with the SCHEMABINDING option not specified.

A function can be schema bound only if the following conditions are true:

  • The function is a Transact-SQL function.
  • The user-defined functions and views referenced by the function are also schema-bound.
  • The objects referenced by the function are referenced using a two-part name.
  • The function and the objects it references belong to the same database.
  • The user who executed the CREATE FUNCTION statement has REFERENCES permission on the database objects that the function references.

RETURNS NULL ON NULL INPUT | CALLED ON NULL INPUT

Specifies the OnNULLCall attribute of a scalar function. If not specified, CALLED ON NULL INPUT is implied by default. In other words, the function body executes even if NULL is passed as an argument.

If RETURNS NULL ON NULL INPUT is specified in a CLR function, it indicates that SQL Server can return NULL when any of the arguments it receives is NULL, without actually invoking the body of the function. If the method of a CLR function specified in <method_specifier> already has a custom attribute that indicates RETURNS NULL ON NULL INPUT, but the CREATE FUNCTION statement indicates CALLED ON NULL INPUT, the CREATE FUNCTION statement takes precedence. The OnNULLCall attribute can't be specified for CLR table-valued functions.

EXECUTE AS

Specifies the security context under which the user-defined function is executed. Therefore, you can control which user account SQL Server uses to validate permissions on any database objects referenced by the function.

EXECUTE AS can't be specified for inline table-valued functions.

For more information, see EXECUTE AS Clause (Transact-SQL).

INLINE = { ON | OFF }

Applies to: SQL Server 2019 (15.x) and later versions, and Azure SQL Database.

Specifies whether this scalar UDF should be inlined or not. This clause applies only to scalar user-defined functions. The INLINE clause isn't mandatory. If the INLINE clause isn't specified, it's automatically set to ON or OFF based on whether the UDF is inlineable. If INLINE = ON is specified but the UDF is found to be non-inlineable, an error is thrown. For more information, see Scalar UDF Inlining.

<column_definition> ::=

Defines the table data type. The table declaration includes column definitions and constraints. For CLR functions, only column_name and data_type can be specified.

column_name

The name of a column in the table. Column names must comply with the rules for identifiers and must be unique in the table. column_name can consist of 1 through 128 characters.

data_type

Specifies the column data type. For Transact-SQL functions, all data types, including CLR user-defined types, are allowed except timestamp. For CLR functions, all data types, including CLR user-defined types, are allowed except text, ntext, image, char, varchar, varchar(max), and timestamp.The nonscalar type cursor can't be specified as a column data type in either Transact-SQL or CLR functions.

DEFAULT constant_expression

Specifies the value provided for the column when a value isn't explicitly supplied during an insert. constant_expression is a constant, NULL, or a system function value. DEFAULT definitions can be applied to any column except ones that have the IDENTITY property. DEFAULT can't be specified for CLR table-valued functions.

COLLATE collation_name

Specifies the collation for the column. If not specified, the column is assigned the default collation of the database. Collation name can be either a Windows collation name or a SQL collation name. For a list of and more information about collations, see Windows Collation Name (Transact-SQL) and SQL Server Collation Name (Transact-SQL).

The COLLATE clause can be used to change the collations only of columns of the char, varchar, nchar, and nvarchar data types. COLLATE can't be specified for CLR table-valued functions.

ROWGUIDCOL

Indicates that the new column is a row globally unique identifier column. Only one uniqueidentifier column per table can be designated as the ROWGUIDCOL column. The ROWGUIDCOL property can be assigned only to a uniqueidentifier column.

The ROWGUIDCOL property doesn't enforce uniqueness of the values stored in the column. It also doesn't automatically generate values for new rows inserted into the table. To generate unique values for each column, use the NEWID function on INSERT statements. A default value can be specified; however, NEWID can't be specified as the default.

IDENTITY

Indicates that the new column is an identity column. When a new row is added to the table, SQL Server provides a unique, incremental value for the column. Identity columns are typically used together with PRIMARY KEY constraints to serve as the unique row identifier for the table. The IDENTITY property can be assigned to tinyint, smallint, int, bigint, decimal(p,0), or numeric(p,0) columns. Only one identity column can be created per table. Bound defaults and DEFAULT constraints can't be used with an identity column. You must specify both the seed and increment or neither. If neither is specified, the default is (1,1).

IDENTITY can't be specified for CLR table-valued functions.

seed

The integer value to be assigned to the first row in the table.

increment

The integer value to add to the seed value for successive rows in the table.

<column_constraint> ::= and <table_constraint> ::=

Defines the constraint for a specified column or table. For CLR functions, the only constraint type allowed is NULL. Named constraints aren't allowed.

NULL | NOT NULL

Determines whether null values are allowed in the column. NULL isn't strictly a constraint but can be specified just like NOT NULL. NOT NULL can't be specified for CLR table-valued functions.

PRIMARY KEY

A constraint that enforces entity integrity for a specified column through a unique index. In table-valued user-defined functions, the PRIMARY KEY constraint can be created on only one column per table. PRIMARY KEY can't be specified for CLR table-valued functions.

UNIQUE

A constraint that provides entity integrity for a specified column or columns through a unique index. A table can have multiple UNIQUE constraints. UNIQUE can't be specified for CLR table-valued functions.

CLUSTERED | NONCLUSTERED

Indicate that a clustered or a nonclustered index is created for the PRIMARY KEY or UNIQUE constraint. PRIMARY KEY constraints use CLUSTERED, and UNIQUE constraints use NONCLUSTERED.

CLUSTERED can be specified for only one constraint. If CLUSTERED is specified for a UNIQUE constraint and a PRIMARY KEY constraint is also specified, the PRIMARY KEY uses NONCLUSTERED.

CLUSTERED and NONCLUSTERED can't be specified for CLR table-valued functions.

CHECK

A constraint that enforces domain integrity by limiting the possible values that can be entered into a column or columns. CHECK constraints can't be specified for CLR table-valued functions.

logical_expression

A logical expression that returns TRUE or FALSE.

<computed_column_definition> ::=

Specifies a computed column. For more information about computed columns, see CREATE TABLE (Transact-SQL).

column_name

The name of the computed column.

computed_column_expression

An expression that defines the value of a computed column.

<index_option> ::=

Specifies the index options for the PRIMARY KEY or UNIQUE index. For more information about index options, see CREATE INDEX (Transact-SQL).

PAD_INDEX = { ON | OFF }

Specifies index padding. The default is OFF.

FILLFACTOR = fillfactor

Specifies a percentage that indicates how full the Database Engine should make the leaf level of each index page during index creation or change. fillfactor must be an integer value from 1 to 100. The default is 0.

IGNORE_DUP_KEY = { ON | OFF }

Specifies the error response when an insert operation attempts to insert duplicate key values into a unique index. The IGNORE_DUP_KEY option applies only to insert operations after the index is created or rebuilt. The default is OFF.

STATISTICS_NORECOMPUTE = { ON | OFF }

Specifies whether distribution statistics are recomputed. The default is OFF.

ALLOW_ROW_LOCKS = { ON | OFF }

Specifies whether row locks are allowed. The default is ON.

ALLOW_PAGE_LOCKS = { ON | OFF }

Specifies whether page locks are allowed. The default is ON.

Best practices

If a user-defined function isn't created with the SCHEMABINDING clause, changes that are made to underlying objects can affect the definition of the function and produce unexpected results when it's invoked. We recommend that you implement one of the following methods to ensure that the function doesn't become outdated because of changes to its underlying objects:

  • Specify the WITH SCHEMABINDING clause when you're creating the function. This option ensures that the objects referenced in the function definition can't be modified, unless the function is also modified.

  • Execute the sp_refreshsqlmodule stored procedure after modifying any object that is specified in the definition of the function.

For more information and performance considerations about inline table-valued functions (inline TVFs) and multi-statement table-valued functions (MSTVFs), see Create user-defined functions (Database Engine).

Data types

If parameters are specified in a CLR function, they should be SQL Server types as defined previously for scalar_parameter_data_type. For more information comparing SQL Server system data types to CLR integration data types, or .NET Framework common language runtime data types, see Mapping CLR Parameter Data.

For SQL Server to reference the correct method when it's overloaded in a class, the method indicated in <method_specifier> must have the following characteristics:

  • Receive the same number of parameters as specified in [ , ...n ].
  • Receive all the parameters by value, not by reference.
  • Use parameter types that are compatible with types specified in the SQL Server function.

If the return data type of the CLR function specifies a table type (RETURNS TABLE), the return data type of the method in <method_specifier> should be of type IEnumerator or IEnumerable, and it assumes that the interface is implemented by the creator of the function. Unlike Transact-SQL functions, CLR functions can't include PRIMARY KEY, UNIQUE, or CHECK constraints in <table_type_definition>. The data types of columns specified in <table_type_definition> must match the types of the corresponding columns of the result set returned by the method in <method_specifier> at execution time. This type-checking isn't performed at the time the function is created.

For more information about how to program CLR functions, see CLR User-Defined Functions.

Remarks

Scalar functions can be invoked where scalar expressions are used, which includes computed columns and CHECK constraint definitions. Scalar functions can also be executed by using the EXECUTE (Transact-SQL) statement. Scalar functions must be invoked by using at least the two-part name of the function (<schema>.<function>). For more information about multipart names, see Transact-SQL Syntax Conventions (Transact-SQL). Table-valued functions can be invoked where table expressions are allowed in the FROM clause of SELECT, INSERT, UPDATE, or DELETE statements. For more information, see Execute user-defined functions.

Interoperability

The following statements are valid in a function:

  • Assignment statements.
  • Control-of-Flow statements except TRY...CATCH statements.
  • DECLARE statements defining local data variables and local cursors.
  • SELECT statements that contain select lists with expressions that assign values to local variables.
  • Cursor operations referencing local cursors that are declared, opened, closed, and deallocated in the function. Only FETCH statements that assign values to local variables using the INTO clause are allowed; FETCH statements that return data to the client aren't allowed.
  • INSERT, UPDATE, and DELETE statements modifying local table variables.
  • EXECUTE statements calling extended stored procedures.

For more information, see Create user-defined functions (Database Engine).

Computed column interoperability

Functions have the following properties. The values of these properties determine whether functions can be used in computed columns that can be persisted or indexed.

Property Description Notes
IsDeterministic Function is deterministic or nondeterministic. Local data access is allowed in deterministic functions. For example, functions that always return the same result whenever they're called using a specific set of input values, and with the same state of the database would be labeled deterministic.
IsPrecise Function is precise or imprecise. Imprecise functions contain operations such as floating point operations.
IsSystemVerified The precision and determinism properties of the function can be verified by SQL Server.
SystemDataAccess Function accesses system data (system catalogs or virtual system tables) in the local instance of SQL Server.
UserDataAccess Function accesses user data in the local instance of SQL Server. Includes user-defined tables and temp tables, but not table variables.

The precision and determinism properties of Transact-SQL functions are determined automatically by SQL Server. The data access and determinism properties of CLR functions can be specified by the user. For more information, see CLR integration: custom attributes for CLR routines.

To display the current values for these properties, use OBJECTPROPERTYEX (Transact-SQL).

Important

Functions must be created with SCHEMABINDING to be deterministic.

A computed column that invokes a user-defined function can be used in an index when the user-defined function has the following property values:

  • IsDeterministic is true
  • IsSystemVerified is true (unless the computed column is persisted)
  • UserDataAccess is false
  • SystemDataAccess is false

For more information, see Indexes on computed columns.

Call extended stored procedures from functions

The extended stored procedure, when calling it from inside a function, can't return result sets to the client. Any ODS APIs that return result sets to the client, return FAIL. The extended stored procedure could connect back to an instance of SQL Server; however, it shouldn't try to join the same transaction as the function that invoked the extended stored procedure.

Similar to invocations from a batch or stored procedure, the extended stored procedure is executed in the context of the Windows security account under which SQL Server is running. The owner of the stored procedure should consider this scenario when giving EXECUTE permission on it to users.

Limitations

User-defined functions can't be used to perform actions that modify the database state.

User-defined functions can't contain an OUTPUT INTO clause that has a table as its target.

The following Service Broker statements can't be included in the definition of a Transact-SQL user-defined function:

  • BEGIN DIALOG CONVERSATION
  • END CONVERSATION
  • GET CONVERSATION GROUP
  • MOVE CONVERSATION
  • RECEIVE
  • SEND

User-defined functions can be nested; that is, one user-defined function can call another. The nesting level is incremented when the called function starts execution, and decremented when the called function finishes execution. User-defined functions can be nested up to 32 levels. Exceeding the maximum levels of nesting causes the whole calling function chain to fail. Any reference to managed code from a Transact-SQL user-defined function counts as one level against the 32-level nesting limit. Methods invoked from within managed code don't count against this limit.

Use sort order in CLR table-valued functions

When using the ORDER clause in CLR table-valued functions, follow these guidelines:

  • You must ensure that results are always ordered in the specified order. If the results aren't in the specified order, SQL Server generates an error message when the query is executed.

  • If an ORDER clause is specified, the output of the table-valued function must be sorted according to the collation of the column (explicit or implicit). For example, if the column collation is Chinese, the returned results must be sorted according to Chinese sorting rules. (Collation is specified either in the DDL for the table-valued function, or obtained from the database collation.)

  • SQL Server always verifies the ORDER clause if specified, while returning results, whether or not the query processor uses it to perform further optimizations. Only use the ORDER clause if you know that it's useful to the query processor.

  • The SQL Server query processor takes advantage of the ORDER clause automatically in following cases:

    • Insert queries where the ORDER clause is compatible with an index.
    • ORDER BY clauses that are compatible with the ORDER clause.
    • Aggregates, where GROUP BY is compatible with ORDER clause.
    • DISTINCT aggregates where the distinct columns are compatible with the ORDER clause.

The ORDER clause doesn't guarantee ordered results when a SELECT query is executed, unless ORDER BY is also specified in the query. See sys.function_order_columns (Transact-SQL) for information on how to query for columns included in the sort-order for table-valued functions.

Metadata

The following table lists the system catalog views that you can use to return metadata about user-defined functions.

System view Description
sys.sql_modules See example E in the Examples section.
sys.assembly_modules Displays information about CLR user-defined functions.
sys.parameters Displays information about the parameters defined in user-defined functions.
sys.sql_expression_dependencies Displays the underlying objects referenced by a function.

Permissions

Requires CREATE FUNCTION permission in the database and ALTER permission on the schema in which the function is being created. If the function specifies a user-defined type, requires EXECUTE permission on the type.

Examples

For more examples and performance considerations about UDFs, see Create user-defined functions (Database Engine).

A. Use a scalar-valued user-defined function that calculates the ISO week

The following example creates the user-defined function ISOweek. This function takes a date argument and calculates the ISO week number. For this function to calculate correctly, SET DATEFIRST 1 must be invoked before the function is called.

The example also shows using the EXECUTE AS Clause (Transact-SQL) clause to specify the security context in which a stored procedure can be executed. In the example, the option CALLER specifies that the procedure is executed in the context of the user that calls it. The other options that you can specify are SELF, OWNER, and user_name.

Here's the function call. DATEFIRST is set to 1.

CREATE FUNCTION dbo.ISOweek (@DATE DATETIME)
RETURNS INT
WITH EXECUTE AS CALLER
AS
BEGIN
    DECLARE @ISOweek INT;

    SET @ISOweek = DATEPART(wk, @DATE) + 1 -
        DATEPART(wk, CAST(DATEPART(yy, @DATE) AS CHAR(4)) + '0104');

    --Special cases: Jan 1-3 may belong to the previous year
    IF (@ISOweek = 0)
        SET @ISOweek = dbo.ISOweek(CAST(DATEPART(yy, @DATE) - 1 AS CHAR(4))
           + '12' + CAST(24 + DATEPART(DAY, @DATE) AS CHAR(2))) + 1;

    --Special case: Dec 29-31 may belong to the next year
    IF ((DATEPART(mm, @DATE) = 12)
        AND ((DATEPART(dd, @DATE) - DATEPART(dw, @DATE)) >= 28))
    SET @ISOweek = 1;

    RETURN (@ISOweek);
END;
GO

SET DATEFIRST 1;

SELECT dbo.ISOweek(CONVERT(DATETIME, '12/26/2004', 101)) AS 'ISO Week';

Here's the result set.

ISO Week
----------------
52

B. Create an inline table-valued function

The following example returns an inline table-valued function in the AdventureWorks2022 database. It returns three columns ProductID, Name, and the aggregate of year-to-date totals by store as YTD Total for each product sold to the store.

CREATE FUNCTION Sales.ufn_SalesByStore (@storeid INT)
RETURNS TABLE
AS
RETURN (
    SELECT P.ProductID, P.Name, SUM(SD.LineTotal) AS 'Total'
    FROM Production.Product AS P
    INNER JOIN Sales.SalesOrderDetail AS SD ON SD.ProductID = P.ProductID
    INNER JOIN Sales.SalesOrderHeader AS SH ON SH.SalesOrderID = SD.SalesOrderID
    INNER JOIN Sales.Customer AS C ON SH.CustomerID = C.CustomerID
    WHERE C.StoreID = @storeid
    GROUP BY P.ProductID, P.Name
);
GO

To invoke the function, run this query.

SELECT * FROM Sales.ufn_SalesByStore (602);

C. Create a multi-statement table-valued function

The following example creates the table-valued function fn_FindReports(InEmpID) in the AdventureWorks2022 database. When supplied with a valid employee ID, the function returns a table that corresponds to all the employees that report to the employee either directly or indirectly. The function uses a recursive common table expression (CTE) to produce the hierarchical list of employees. For more information about recursive CTEs, see WITH common_table_expression (Transact-SQL).

CREATE FUNCTION dbo.ufn_FindReports (@InEmpID INT)
RETURNS @retFindReports TABLE (
    EmployeeID INT PRIMARY KEY NOT NULL,
    FirstName NVARCHAR(255) NOT NULL,
    LastName NVARCHAR(255) NOT NULL,
    JobTitle NVARCHAR(50) NOT NULL,
    RecursionLevel INT NOT NULL
    )
    --Returns a result set that lists all the employees who report to the
    --specific employee directly or indirectly.
AS
BEGIN
    WITH EMP_cte (
        EmployeeID,
        OrganizationNode,
        FirstName,
        LastName,
        JobTitle,
        RecursionLevel
        ) -- CTE name and columns
    AS (
        -- Get the initial list of Employees for Manager n
        SELECT e.BusinessEntityID,
            OrganizationNode = ISNULL(e.OrganizationNode, CAST('/' AS HIERARCHYID)),
            p.FirstName,
            p.LastName,
            e.JobTitle,
            0
        FROM HumanResources.Employee e
        INNER JOIN Person.Person p
            ON p.BusinessEntityID = e.BusinessEntityID
        WHERE e.BusinessEntityID = @InEmpID
        
        UNION ALL
        
        -- Join recursive member to anchor
        SELECT e.BusinessEntityID,
            e.OrganizationNode,
            p.FirstName,
            p.LastName,
            e.JobTitle,
            RecursionLevel + 1
        FROM HumanResources.Employee e
        INNER JOIN EMP_cte
            ON e.OrganizationNode.GetAncestor(1) = EMP_cte.OrganizationNode
        INNER JOIN Person.Person p
            ON p.BusinessEntityID = e.BusinessEntityID
        )
    -- Copy the required columns to the result of the function
    INSERT @retFindReports
    SELECT EmployeeID,
        FirstName,
        LastName,
        JobTitle,
        RecursionLevel
    FROM EMP_cte

    RETURN
END;
GO

-- Example invocation
SELECT EmployeeID,
    FirstName,
    LastName,
    JobTitle,
    RecursionLevel
FROM dbo.ufn_FindReports(1);
GO

D. Create a CLR function

The example creates CLR function len_s. Before the function is created, the assembly SurrogateStringFunction.dll is registered in the local database.

Applies to: SQL Server 2008 (10.0.x) SP 1 and later versions.

DECLARE @SamplesPath NVARCHAR(1024);

-- You may have to modify the value of this variable if you have
-- installed the sample in a location other than the default location.
SELECT @SamplesPath = REPLACE(physical_name,
    'Microsoft SQL Server\MSSQL13.MSSQLSERVER\MSSQL\DATA\master.mdf',
    'Microsoft SQL Server\130\Samples\Engine\Programmability\CLR\'
)
FROM master.sys.database_files
WHERE name = 'master';

CREATE ASSEMBLY [SurrogateStringFunction]
FROM @SamplesPath + 'StringManipulate\CS\StringManipulate\bin\debug\SurrogateStringFunction.dll'
    WITH PERMISSION_SET = EXTERNAL_ACCESS;
GO

CREATE FUNCTION [dbo].[len_s] (@str NVARCHAR(4000))
RETURNS BIGINT
AS
EXTERNAL NAME [SurrogateStringFunction].[Microsoft.Samples.SqlServer.SurrogateStringFunction].[LenS];
GO

For an example of how to create a CLR table-valued function, see CLR Table-Valued Functions.

E. Display the definition of user-defined functions

SELECT DEFINITION,
    type
FROM sys.sql_modules AS m
INNER JOIN sys.objects AS o
    ON m.object_id = o.object_id
    AND type IN ('FN', 'IF', 'TF');
GO

The definition of functions created by using the ENCRYPTION option can't be viewed by using sys.sql_modules; however, other information about the encrypted functions is displayed.