Creating a Sequential Record Number field

By Bill Graziano on 25 September 2000 | Tags: UPDATE


Ok, this has to be one of the coolest things I've discoverd about SQL Server in quite a while. It is a way to create a sequential record number field on a table using a single update statement. Until I discovered this, I would have said this was impossible. Read on for the solution.

While digging around in SQL Server recently I discovered something very interesting. There is a quote from Books Online for the UPDATE statement that says:

SET @variable = column = expression sets the variable to the same value as the column. This differs from SET @variable = column, column = expression, which sets the variable to the pre-update value of the column.
This led me to believe I might be able to use a single update statement to increment a value in a table. Before this trick, if you wanted to create a sequential record number you had two bad choices. You could create a cursor and move through the records, setting the values one at a time to counter value that you incrememented. That was slow and not a set-oriented operation like SQL Server likes.

The second option was to create a temp table with an identity column and a column for the primary key of the table you wanted to number. Insert all the records into the temp table and the temp table identity column becomes the sequential record counter. You can join back to the original table and update the sequential record number. The only reason you'd still choose this option is if you want a custom sort order. This little trick won't give you that.

This little piece of code will run through a table and sequentially number the field you specify. The only drawback is that it will determine the order based on the physical order of the table.

declare @intCounter int
set @intCounter = 0
update Yaks
SET @intCounter = YakSequenceNumber = @intCounter + 1


After running this statement, the field YakSequenceNumber will hold nicely incremented values.


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