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Home/ Questions/Q 148791
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Asked: May 11, 20262026-05-11T09:01:17+00:00 2026-05-11T09:01:17+00:00

When writing TSQL stored procedures I find myself wanting to centralize / normalize some

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When writing TSQL stored procedures I find myself wanting to centralize / normalize some parts of the code. For example, if I have a query like this:

SELECT * FROM SomeTable WHERE SomeColumn IN (2, 4, 8) 

For cases like this I would like to put (2,4,8) in some place outside of the procedure that I could reuse in some other query later — to avoid repetition. Is there a built-in way to do this? What would really neat is if I could break apart entire pieces of SQL code, like parts of the WHERE clause, and reuse those in other queries, but I doubt this is possible.

Thanks.

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  1. 2026-05-11T09:01:18+00:00Added an answer on May 11, 2026 at 9:01 am

    I’ve often wanted a similar thing but that specifically does not exist. Here are a couple of things you can do.

    Option 1

    What we have done is used User Defined Functions (UDF) to gather what you might call global variables.

    You’re able to call a UDF inline within your query which makes it really useful.

    Suppose you wanted to specify a server name which you’d use across multiple stored procedures. Duplicating that value wouldn’t be optimally maintainable. Instead you might do something like:

    select * from clientNodes where serverName = dbo.SOME_SERVER_NAME() 

    Option 2

    This one is more obvious but worth pointing out. Keep your values in a lookup table and reference it by an ID. The ID wouldn’t change but the value it refers to might. Using the sample example as above but for this option:

    Table: Servers Columns: ServerID, ServerName  declare @serverName varchar(50) select @serverName = ServerName from Servers where ServerID = 1 

    This is a typical approach to database normalization but people don’t necessarily think about this for purposes of keeping DB-logic data centralized.

    I hope that helps! Ian

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