Suppose I have two table. First table\'s primary key is the foreign key for another table.
Table Member has its primary key as the foreign key in
SCOPE_IDENTITY returns the last identity value inserted into an identity column in the same scope.
Given you have 2 tables:
Member: id int (primaryKey), name varchar
Member_Detail: id int (primaryKey), pk int (foreignKey), name varchar
You can do this:
DECLARE @MemberId int
INSERT INTO Member (name) VALUES ('hello');
SET @MemberId = SCOPE_IDENTITY()
INSERT INTO Member_Detail (pk, name) VALUES (@MemberId, 'hello again')
MSDN Reference:
Returns the last identity value inserted into an identity column in the same scope. A scope is a module: a stored procedure, trigger, function, or batch. Therefore, two statements are in the same scope if they are in the same stored procedure, function, or batch.