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Posted by BF on 01/15/07 13:23
Thanks for the quick respond.
The solution is not quite what I was hoping for.
For each new version I create an update script, We have an app which
does that and there are lots of Go commands.
I want to have one update script for all versions of the app so we have
2.00 to 2.01 to 2.02 to 2.03 etc.
For each version I have a script and I want to lookup the version, if
version is 2.03 I can start updating from 2.03 to 2.04 with the goto I
can jump over all other updates because they are already done in the
past.
When I use different files I cannot easy control which files to
execute, or I have to run them from the main script.
Grtx Bob
dmarkle schreef:
> Here's the trick with "GO":
>
> It's not actually a part of the T-SQL language. It's a batch
> separator. (Don't believe me? Try running "exec('GO')" in Query
> Analyzer.)
>
> Think of it like this: Cut up your script into multiple files,
> separated by the "GO" statement. Run each of these files individually,
> but use the same connection. That's all "GO" does.
>
> So you need to remove the "GO" batch separators in between your
> statements that need to be run in the same batch.
>
> -Dave Markle
> http://www.markleconsulting.com/blog
>
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