sp_get_query_template

Returns the parameterized form of a query. The results returned mimic the parameterized form of a query that results from using forced parameterization. sp_get_query_template is used primarily when you create TEMPLATE plan guides.

Topic link iconTransact-SQL Syntax Conventions

Syntax

sp_get_query_template
   [ @querytext = ] N'query_text'         
      , @templatetext OUTPUT 
      , @parameters OUTPUT 

Arguments

  • 'query_text'
    Is the query for which the parameterized version is to be generated. 'query_text' must be enclosed in single quotation marks and be preceded by the N Unicode specifier. N'query_text' is the value assigned to the @querytext parameter. This is of type nvarchar(max).
  • @templatetext
    Is an output parameter of type nvarchar(max), provided as indicated, to receive the parameterized form of query_text as a string literal.
  • @parameters
    Is an output parameter of type nvarchar(max), provided as indicated, to receive a string literal of the parameter names and data types that have been parameterized in @templatetext.

Remarks

sp_get_query_template returns an error when the following occur:

  • It does not parameterize any constant literal values in query_text.
  • query_text is NULL, not a Unicode string, syntactically not valid, or cannot be compiled.

If sp_get_query_template returns an error, it does not modify the values of the the @templatetext and @parameters output parameters.

Permissions

Requires membership in the public database role.

Examples

The following example returns the parameterized form of a query that contains two constant literal values.

USE AdventureWorks;
GO
DECLARE @my_templatetext nvarchar(max)
DECLARE @my_parameters nvarchar(max)
EXEC sp_get_query_template 
    N'SELECT pi.ProductID, SUM(pi.Quantity) AS Total
        FROM Production.ProductModel pm 
        INNER JOIN Production.ProductInventory pi
        ON pm.ProductModelID = pi.ProductID
        WHERE pi.ProductID = 2
        GROUP BY pi.ProductID, pi.Quantity
        HAVING SUM(pi.Quantity) > 400',
@my_templatetext OUTPUT,
@my_parameters OUTPUT;
SELECT @my_templatetext;
SELECT @my_parameters;

Here are the parameterized results of the @my_templatetext``OUTPUT parameter:

select pi . ProductID , SUM ( pi . Quantity ) as Total from Production . ProductModel pm inner join Production . ProductInventory pi on pm . ProductModelID = pi . ProductID where pi . ProductID = @0 group by pi . ProductID , pi . Quantity having SUM ( pi . Quantity ) > 400

Note that the first constant literal, 2, is converted to a parameter. The second literal, 400, is not converted because it is inside a HAVING clause. The results returned by sp_get_query_template mimic the parameterized form of a query when the PARAMETERIZATION option of ALTER DATABASE is set to FORCED. For information about which variables are parameterized under these conditions, see Forced Parameterization.

Here are the parameterized results of the @my_parameters``OUTPUT parameter:

@0 int

Note

The order and naming of parameters in the output of sp_get_query_template can change between quick-fix engineering, service pack, and version upgrades of SQL Server. Upgrades can also cause a different set of constant literals to be parameterized for the same query, and different spacing to be applied in the results of both output parameters.

See Also

Reference

System Stored Procedures (Transact-SQL)
Database Engine Stored Procedures (Transact-SQL)

Other Resources

Specifying Query Parameterization Behavior by Using Plan Guides
Designing Plan Guides for Parameterized Queries

Help and Information

Getting SQL Server 2005 Assistance