Name resolution of SQL objects
Informix®
Informix uses the following form to identify an SQL
object:
database[@dbservername]:][{owner|"owner"}.]identifier
The ANSI convention is to use double quotes for identifier delimiters (For example:
"customer"."cust_name"
).
Informix database object names are not case-sensitive in non-ANSI databases. When using double-quoted identifiers, Informix becomes case sensitive.
With non-ANSI Informix databases, you do not have to
give a schema name before the tables when executing an SQL
statement:
SELECT ... FROM customer WHERE ...
In
Informix ANSI compliant databases:
- The table name must include "owner", unless the connected user is the owner of the database object.
- The database server shifts the owner name to uppercase letters before the statement executes, unless the owner name is enclosed in double quotes.
Microsoft™ SQL Server
With Microsoft SQL Server, an object
name takes the following form:
[[database.]owner.]identifier
Object names are limited to 128 characters in SQL Server and cannot start with one of the following characters: @ (local variable) # (temp object).
To support double quotes as string delimiters in SQL Server, you can switch OFF the database option "Use quoted identifiers" in the database properties panel. But quoted table and column names are not supported when this option is OFF.
Solution
To write portable SQL, regarding database object names:
- Use simple database object names (without any owner/schema prefix)
- Do not use double quotes to surround database object identifiers.
- If needed, define public synonyms to reference database objects in others databases/schema.
- Specify database object identifiers in lowercase.
Check for single or double quoted table or column names in your source and remove them.
If cross-database queries are required (using the
dbname:tabname
Informix
notation), consider to create views in the main database in SQL Server, to allow program to access
the distant table from the same database
connection:CREATE VIEW myotherdb_customers AS SELECT * FROM myotherdb.dbo.customers