ODBC and SQL Server

Constructing an SQL Statement

ODBC applications perform almost all of their database access by executing Microsoft® SQL Server™ statements. The form of these statements depends on the application requirements. SQL statements can be constructed in the following ways:

The SQL Server ODBC driver parses SQL statements only for ODBC and SQL-92 syntax not directly supported by the database engine, which the driver transforms into Transact-SQL. All other SQL syntax is passed to the database engine unchanged, where SQL Server will determine if it is valid Transact-SQL. This approach yields two benefits:

The column list in a SELECT statement should contain only the columns required to perform the current task. Not only does this reduce the amount of data sent across the network, but also it reduces the effect of database changes on the application. If an application does not reference a column from a table, then the application is not affected by any changes made to that column.

To use statements

ODBC

ODBC