…Cuthbert, Dibble, Grub.
I never ceases to amaze me that there is always that little bit of SQL Server functionality that you didn’t know about. Some of it good and some of it bad, some of it just meh…
The other day I was stumbling around a new environment, when I decided to use the GUI to script out an existing set of views when I saw something that had me scratching my head. Underneath the actual view definition was the following (some names removed to protect the innocent)…
---------------------------------- -- note view definition removed -- ---------------------------------- GO EXEC sys.sp_addextendedproperty @name=N'MS_DiagramPane1', @value=N'[0E232FF0-B466-11cf-A24F-00AA00A3EFFF, 1.00] Begin DesignProperties = Begin PaneConfigurations = Begin PaneConfiguration = 0 NumPanes = 4 Configuration = "(H (1[40] 4[20] 2[20] 3) )" End Begin PaneConfiguration = 1 NumPanes = 3 Configuration = "(H (1 [50] 4 [25] 3))" End Begin PaneConfiguration = 2 NumPanes = 3 Configuration = "(H (1 [50] 2 [25] 3))" End Begin PaneConfiguration = 3 NumPanes = 3 Configuration = "(H (4 [30] 2 [40] 3))" End Begin PaneConfiguration = 4 NumPanes = 2 Configuration = "(H (1 [56] 3))" End Begin PaneConfiguration = 5 NumPanes = 2 Configuration = "(H (2 [66] 3))" End Begin PaneConfiguration = 6 NumPanes = 2 Configuration = "(H (4 [50] 3))" End Begin PaneConfiguration = 7 NumPanes = 1 Configuration = "(V (3))" End Begin PaneConfiguration = 8 NumPanes = 3 Configuration = "(H (1[56] 4[18] 2) )" End Begin PaneConfiguration = 9 NumPanes = 2 Configuration = "(H (1 [75] 4))" End Begin PaneConfiguration = 10 NumPanes = 2 Configuration = "(H (1[66] 2) )" End Begin PaneConfiguration = 11 NumPanes = 2 Configuration = "(H (4 [60] 2))" End Begin PaneConfiguration = 12 NumPanes = 1 Configuration = "(H (1) )" End Begin PaneConfiguration = 13 NumPanes = 1 Configuration = "(V (4))" End Begin PaneConfiguration = 14 NumPanes = 1 Configuration = "(V (2))" End ActivePaneConfig = 0 End Begin DiagramPane = Begin Origin = Top = 0 Left = 0 End Begin Tables = Begin Table = "Customer" Begin Extent = Top = 6 Left = 38 Bottom = 114 Right = 227 End DisplayFlags = 280 TopColumn = 0 End Begin Table = "Order" Begin Extent = Top = 6 Left = 265 Bottom = 114 Right = 492 End DisplayFlags = 280 TopColumn = 0 End End End Begin SQLPane = End Begin DataPane = Begin ParameterDefaults = "" End End Begin CriteriaPane = Begin ColumnWidths = 12 Column = 1440 Alias = 900 Table = 1170 Output = 720 Append = 1400 NewValue = 1170 SortType = 1350 SortOrder = 1410 GroupBy = 1350 Filter = 1350 Or = 1350 Or = 1350 Or = 1350 End End End ' , @level0type=N'SCHEMA',@level0name=N'dbo', @level1type=N'VIEW',@level1name=N'omsPerMonth' GO EXEC sys.sp_addextendedproperty @name=N'MS_DiagramPaneCount', @value=1 , @level0type=N'SCHEMA',@level0name=N'dbo', @level1type=N'VIEW',@level1name=N'omsPM' GO
So after a few tests it turns out that when you create SQL Server Views using the SQL Server Management Studio View Designer, SSMS automatically generates and adds these properties to the view behind the scenes to aid the Designer for re-editing purposes. Please bear this in mind when generating scripts for deployment into your staging environments, whilst there doesn’t appear to be any performance drawbacks to this extra meta-data, it is messy and (imho) not best practice to redeploy into production.
Filed under: development, gui, SQLServerPedia Syndication, ssms, tsql
