Difference between using SET and SELECT when assigning variables in T-SQL

I came across a great article by Narayana Vyas Kondreddi that describes the difference between the SET and SELECT .

The article is well worth the read, but here are the main points:
  1. SET is the ANSI standard for variable assignment, SELECT is not.
    SET can only assign one variable at a time, SELECT can make multiple assignments at once.
  2. If assigning from a query, SET can only assign a scalar value. If the query returns multiple values/rows then SET will raise an error. SELECT will assign one of the values to the variable and hide the fact that multiple values were returned (so you'd likely never know why something was going wrong elsewhere - have fun troubleshooting that one)
  3. When assigning from a query if there is no value returned then SET will assign NULL, where SELECT will not make the assignment at all (so the variable will not be changed from it's previous value)
  4. As far as speed differences - there are no direct differences between SET and SELECT. However SELECT's ability to make multiple assignments in one shot does give it a slight speed advantage over SET.

Take a look at the complete article to see Vyas' complete tests to get the entire picture: [http://vyaskn.tripod.com/differences_between_set_and_select.htm]

2 comments:

Unknown said...

This is just the kind of information that i had been looking for, i'm already your rss reader now and i would regularly watch out for the new posts, once again hats off to you! Thanks a lot once again, Regards, Difference sql and tsql



Vinit said...

Thanks, Nandkishor. Appreciate it.