I would like this to be the ultimate discussion on how to check if a table exists in SQL Server 2000/2005 using SQL Statements.
When you Google for the answer, you get so many different answers. Is there an official/backward and forward compatible way of doing it?
Here are two possible ways of doing it. Which one among the two is the standard/best way of doing it?
First way:
IF EXISTS (SELECT 1
FROM INFORMATION_SCHEMA.TABLES
WHERE TABLE_TYPE='BASE TABLE'
AND TABLE_NAME='mytablename')
SELECT 1 AS res ELSE SELECT 0 AS res;
Second way:
IF OBJECT_ID (N'mytablename', N'U') IS NOT NULL
SELECT 1 AS res ELSE SELECT 0 AS res;
MySQL provides the simple
SHOW TABLES LIKE '%tablename%';
statement. I am looking for something similar.
For queries like this it is always best to use an INFORMATION_SCHEMA
view. These views are (mostly) standard across many different databases and rarely change from version to version.
To check if a table exists use:
IF (EXISTS (SELECT *
FROM INFORMATION_SCHEMA.TABLES
WHERE TABLE_SCHEMA = 'TheSchema'
AND TABLE_NAME = 'TheTable'))
BEGIN
--Do Stuff
END