

Creating Models › Target Servers for Physical Models › Database Property Editors › SQL Server Property Editors › SQL Server Property Editors › Define a View in SQL Server
Define a View in SQL Server
Use the SQL Server View Editor to define the views in a database in a SQL Server physical model.
To define a SQL Server view
- Click Views on the Model menu.
The SQL Server View Editor opens.
- Select the view in the Navigation Grid that you want to define and work with the following options:
Note: Click New
on the toolbar to create a new view. Use the Enter filter text box to filter a very large list of views to quickly locate the one that you want to define.
- Name
-
Specifies the name of the view. Change the name of the view in this field.
- Schema
-
Specifies the schema of the database to which the view belongs. Select the schema from the drop-down list.
- Generate
-
Generates SQL during forward engineering. Clear the check box if you do not want to generate SQL.
- Click the General tab and work with the following options:
- Encryption
-
Specifies to use encryption for the view so that the view is not published during SQL Server replication.
- Schema Binding
-
Specifies to use schema binding on the view, which binds the view to the schema of tables upon which the view is based.
- View Metadata
-
Specifies that the instance of SQL Server returns the metadata information of the view and not the metadata of the tables upon which the view is based.
- Work with the other tabs in the editor to access additional design features, for example:
- Specify the tables or views to define the view column in the Select tab
- Select the tables and views that you want to participate in the view using the From tab
- Enter text to define a WHERE clause in the Where tab
- View and change a user-provided DDL statement in the User Defined SQL tab
- View the SQL code used during Forward Engineering using the SQL tab
- Work with style sheets which are used to format the font and other graphical themes used in the display of the view in the Style tab
- Specify the icon style to use for the view in the Icon tab
- Define view permissions using the Permission tab
- Specify the order of DDL generation in the Object Creation Order tab
- View history information and view or edit user notes in the Notes tab
- (Optional) Click the Comment tab and enter any comments that you want to associate with the object.
- (Optional) Click the Where Used tab to view where the object is used within the model.
- (Optional) Click the UDP tab to work with user-defined properties for the object.
- (Optional) Click the History tab to view the history information for the object.
- (Optional) Click the Notes tab to view and edit user notes.
- Click Close.
The view is defined and the SQL Server View Editor closes.
Copyright © 2017 erwin Inc.
All rights reserved.
 
|
|