0
Pas un bug

SQL Server Model with column name of Order adds quotes

Kindler Chase il y a 10 ans mis à jour par Rafał Strzaliński (Senior Engineer) il y a 10 ans 6
When adding a table for SQL Server and with a column name of Order, the generated SQL incorrectly adds quotes around the column name:

-- tables-- Table: OrderTest
CREATE TABLE OrderTest (
 "Order" int NOT NULL,
 Value varchar(250) NOT NULL
)
;

The generated SQL should be using brackets:

-- tables-- Table: OrderTest
CREATE TABLE OrderTest (
[Order] int NOT NULL,
 Value varchar(250) NOT NULL
)
;

I haven't tried other key words; if you fix this, I'd suggest testing other key words as well.

Thanks!
JE SUIS SATISFAIT
Note de satisfaction par Kindler Chase il y a 10 ans
AFAIK MS SQL Server supports both way of quoting names. We're using quotes (""). This is the facto standard among other database engines. Maybe there is a difference between "" and [] that we don't know.
I was using the auto-generated SQL from Vertabello and the quoted "Order" caused an error with SQL Server 2012. I'm not entirely sure what the entire scenario was, but when I manually updated to [Order], everything ran fine. A bit of research and it appears that QUOTED_IDENTIFIER must be enabled to allow the double quotes, otherwise, brackets must be used.
According to this document https://technet.microsoft.com/pl-pl/library/ms174393.aspx QUOTED_IDENTIFIER is enabled by default. Please check if you didn't changed sth by an accident. We would like to stick to the "default" behaviour and don't put the "set quoted_identifier on" statement into generated script.

Let's us know what did you found.
I've tried to reproduce the setup I defined in the SQL that prompted this topic, but have been unsuccessful. And I have never set anything with quoted_identifier in the current database. I think this can be closed as not reproducible. Thanks for looking into it!