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Home/ Questions/Q 754803
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 14, 20262026-05-14T15:03:22+00:00 2026-05-14T15:03:22+00:00

I reading some old ScottGu’s blogs on Linq2SQL. Now I’m doing the SPROC part.

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I reading some old ScottGu’s blogs on Linq2SQL. Now I’m doing the SPROC part. I’d like to know what’s the exact meaning of @variable.

See this from ScottGu’s Blog

ALTER PROCEDURE dbo.GetCustomersDetails
(
  @customerID nchar(5),
  @companyName nvarchar(40) output
)
AS
SELECT @companyName = CompanyName FROM Customers
WHERE CustomerID = @customerID

SELECT *
FROM Orders
WHERE CustomerID = @customerID
ORDER BY OrderID

I’m kind of lost as, so far, I’ve though of anything preceded by a ‘@’ as a placeholder for user input. But, in the example above, it looks like ‘@companyName’ is used as a regular variable like in C# for instance (SELECT @companyName = …). But, @companyName is not known yet.

So, what the true nature a something preceded by a ‘@’ like above? a vriable? a simple placeholder to accommodate user entered value?

Thanks for helping

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-14T15:03:22+00:00Added an answer on May 14, 2026 at 3:03 pm

    It is simply a variable.

    Remember that stored procedures can have input and output parameters. @companyName in that case is a variable holding the value that will be output when the procedure GetCustomersDetails is called (note the output after the parameter declaration).

    This procedure is also returning a result set in addition to the output parameter. You also have the option of setting a return code if you wish, so there are at least three ways of returning data from a stored procedure that can all be used at the same time: output parameters, result sets, and return codes.

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