Bewerken

Delen via


sp_unbindefault (Transact-SQL)

Applies to: SQL Server

Unbinds, or removes, a default from a column or from an alias data type in the current database.

Important

This feature will be removed in a future version of SQL Server. Avoid using this feature in new development work, and plan to modify applications that currently use this feature. We recommend that you create default definitions by using the DEFAULT keyword in the ALTER TABLE or CREATE TABLE statements instead.

Transact-SQL syntax conventions

Syntax

sp_unbindefault
    [ @objname = ] N'objname'
    [ , [ @futureonly = ] 'futureonly' ]
[ ; ]

Arguments

[ @objname = ] N'objname'

The name of the table and column or the alias data type from which the default is to be unbound. @objname is nvarchar(776), with no default. SQL Server attempts to resolve two-part identifiers to column names first, then to alias data types.

When unbinding a default from an alias data type, any columns of that data type that have the same default are also unbound. Columns of that data type with defaults bound directly to them are unaffected.

Note

@objname can contain brackets [] as delimited identifier characters. For more information, see Database identifiers.

[ @futureonly = ] 'futureonly'

Used only when unbinding a default from an alias data type. @futureonly is varchar(15), with a default of NULL. When @futureonly is futureonly, existing columns of the data type don't lose the specified default.

Return code values

0 (success) or 1 (failure).

Remarks

To display the text of a default, execute sp_helptext with the name of the default as the parameter.

Permissions

To unbind a default from a table column requires ALTER permission on the table. To unbind a default from an alias data type requires CONTROL permission on the type or ALTER permission on the schema to which the type belongs.

Examples

A. Unbind a default from a column

The following example unbinds the default from the hiredate column of an employees table.

EXEC sp_unbindefault 'employees.hiredate';

B. Unbind a default from an alias data type

The following example unbinds the default from the alias data type ssn. It unbinds existing and future columns of that type.

EXEC sp_unbindefault 'ssn';

C. Use the futureonly_flag

The following example unbinds future uses of the alias data type ssn without affecting existing ssn columns.

EXEC sp_unbindefault 'ssn', 'futureonly';

D. Use delimited identifiers

The following example shows using delimited identifiers in @objname parameter. Notice the period as part of the table name. In the sp_unbindefault portion, the object contains two periods; the first is part of the table name, and the second distinguishes the table name from the column name.

--
CREATE TABLE [t.3] (c1 INT);

CREATE DEFAULT default2 AS 0;
GO

EXEC sp_bindefault 'default2', '[t.3].c1';

EXEC sp_unbindefault '[t.3].c1';