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Returns the object identifier (ID) of the current Transact-SQL module. A Transact-SQL module can be a stored procedure, user-defined function, or trigger. @@PROCID cannot be specified in CLR modules or the in-process data access provider.
Transact-SQL Syntax Conventions
Syntax
@@PROCID
Return Types
int
Examples
The following example uses @@PROCID
as the input parameter in the OBJECT_NAME
function to return the name of the stored procedure in the RAISERROR
message.
USE AdventureWorks;
GO
IF OBJECT_ID ( 'usp_FindName', 'P' ) IS NOT NULL
DROP PROCEDURE usp_FindName;
GO
CREATE PROCEDURE usp_FindName
@lastname varchar(40) = '%',
@firstname varchar(20) = '%'
AS
DECLARE @Count int;
DECLARE @ProcName nvarchar(128);
SELECT LastName, FirstName, Phone, EmailAddress
FROM Person.Contact
WHERE FirstName LIKE @firstname AND LastName LIKE @lastname;
SET @Count = @@ROWCOUNT;
SET @ProcName = OBJECT_NAME(@@PROCID);
RAISERROR ('Stored procedure %s returned %d rows.', 16,10, @ProcName, @Count);
GO
EXECUTE dbo.usp_FindName 'P%', 'A%';
See Also
Reference
CREATE FUNCTION (Transact-SQL)
CREATE PROCEDURE (Transact-SQL)
CREATE TRIGGER (Transact-SQL)
Metadata Functions (Transact-SQL)
sys.objects (Transact-SQL)
sys.sql_modules (Transact-SQL)
RAISERROR (Transact-SQL)