Today , I am going to share one of important concept .It sounds very small but it is very important.Whenever we write any procedure and execute it a message appears in message window that shows number of rows affected with the statement written in the procedure.
e.g
CREATE PROCEDURE Test_no_count
AS
SET NOCOUNT OFF
BEGIN
SELECT 1
SELECT 2
SELECT 3
SELECT 4
END
GO
Exec Test_no_count
GO
Go
Default value is SET NOCOUNT OFF.We don't need to specify OFF.For demo purpose I have specified explicitly.
Default value is SET NOCOUNT OFF.We don't need to specify OFF.For demo purpose I have specified explicitly.
If it is off then it will return affected row message as marked circle sometime affected row count will be multiple of 100s so this message will creates an extra overhead on the network.
By using SET NOCOUNT we can remove this extra overhead from the network, that can actually improve the performance of our database and our application.
When SET NOCOUNT is ON, the count is not returned. When SET NOCOUNT is OFF, the count is returned.
GO
BEGIN
SELECT 2
SELECT 3
SELECT 4
GO
CREATE PROCEDURE Test_no_count
AS
SET nocount On
BEGIN
SELECT 1
SELECT 2
SELECT 3
SELECT 4
END
GO
Exec Test_no_count
GO
Important thing is @@ROWCOUNT function is updated even when SET NOCOUNT is ON.
SET NOCOUNT ON statement can be useful in store procedures. SET NOCOUNT ON statement into store procedures can reduce network traffic, because client will not receive the message indicating the number of rows affected by T-SQL statement. Setting SET NOCOUNT to ON can provide a significant performance boost, because network traffic is greatly reduced.