Datatype |
Min |
Max |
Storage |
Type |
Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Bigint | -2^63 | 2^63-1 | 8 bytes | Exact | |
Int | -2,147,483,648 | 2,147,483,647 | 4 bytes | Exact | |
Smallint | -32,768 | 32,767 | 2 bytes | Exact | |
Tinyint | 0 | 255 | 1 bytes | Exact | |
Bit | 0 | 1 | 1 to 8 bit columns in the same table requires a total of 1 byte, 9 to 16 bits = 2 bytes, etc... | Exact | |
Decimal | -10^38+1 | 10^381 | Precision 1-9 = 5 bytes, precision 10-19 = 9 bytes, precision 20-28 = 13 bytes, precision 29-38 = 17 bytes | Exact | The Decimal and the Numeric data type is exactly the same. Precision is the total number of digits. Scale is the number of decimals. For both the minimum is 1 and the maximum is 38. |
Numeric | same as Decimal | same as Decimal | same as Decimal | Exact | |
Money | -2^63 / 10000 | 2^63-1 / 10000 | 8 bytes | Exact | |
Smallmoney | -214,748.3648 | 214,748.3647 | 4 bytes | Exact | |
Float | -1.79E + 308 | 1.79E + 308 | 4 bytes when precision is less than 25 and 8 bytes when precision is 25 through 53 | Approx | Precision is specified from 1 to 53. |
Real | -3.40E + 38 | 3.40E + 38 | 4 bytes | Approx | Precision is fixed to 7. |
Datetime | 1753-01-01 00:00:00.000 | 9999-12-31 23:59:59.997 | 8 bytes | Datetime | If you are running SQL Server 2008 or later and need milliseconds precision, use datetime2(3) instead to save 1 byte. |
Smalldatetime | 1900-01-01 00:00 | 2079-06-06 23:59 | Datetime | ||
Char | 0 chars | 8000 chars | Defined width | String | Fixed width |
Varchar | 0 chars | 8000 chars | 2 bytes + number of chars | String | Variable width |
Varchar(max) | 0 chars | 2^31 chars | 2 bytes + number of chars | String | Variable width |
Text | 0 chars | 2,147,483,647 chars | 4 bytes + number of chars | String | Variable width |
Nchar | 0 chars | 4000 chars | Defined width x 2 | Unicode | Fixed width |
Nvarchar | 0 chars | 4000 chars | Unicode | Variable width | |
Nvarchar(max) | 0 chars | 2^30 chars | Unicode | Variable width | |
Ntext | 0 chars | 1,073,741,823 chars | Unicode | Variable width | |
Binary | 0 bytes | 8000 bytes | Binary | Fixed width | |
Varbinary | 0 bytes | 8000 bytes | Binary | Variable width | |
Varbinary(max) | 0 bytes | 2^31 bytes | Binary | Variable width | |
Image | 0 bytes | 2,147,483,647 bytes | Binary | Variable width. Prefer to use the varbinary(max) type as the image type will be removed in future versions. | |
Sql_variant | Other | Stores values of various SQL Server-supported data types, except text, ntext, and timestamp. | |||
Timestamp | Other | Stores a database-wide unique number that gets updated every time a row gets updated. | |||
Uniqueidentifier | Other | Stores a globally unique identifier (GUID). | |||
Xml | Other | Stores XML data. You can store xml instances in a column or a variable. | |||
Cursor | Other | A reference to a cursor. | |||
Table | Other | Stores a result set for later processing. |
file: /Techref/language/sql/2005DataTypes.htm, 6KB, , updated: 2017/8/7 08:14, local time: 2024/12/23 18:30,
18.191.37.129:LOG IN
|
©2024 These pages are served without commercial sponsorship. (No popup ads, etc...).Bandwidth abuse increases hosting cost forcing sponsorship or shutdown. This server aggressively defends against automated copying for any reason including offline viewing, duplication, etc... Please respect this requirement and DO NOT RIP THIS SITE. Questions? <A HREF="http://sxlist.com/Techref/language/sql/2005DataTypes.htm"> Microsoft Transact SQL Server 2005 Data Types</A> |
Did you find what you needed? |
Welcome to sxlist.com!sales, advertizing, & kind contributors just like you! Please don't rip/copy (here's why Copies of the site on CD are available at minimal cost. |
Welcome to sxlist.com! |
.