title: "SQRT (Transact-SQL) | Microsoft Docs" ms.custom: "" ms.date: "03/03/2017" ms.prod: sql ms.prod_service: "database-engine, sql-database, sql-data-warehouse, pdw" ms.component: "t-sql|functions" ms.reviewer: "" ms.suite: "sql" ms.technology: t-sql ms.tgt_pltfrm: "" ms.topic: "language-reference" f1_keywords:
- "SQRT"
- "SQRT_TSQL" dev_langs:
- "TSQL" helpviewer_keywords:
- "SQRT function"
- "square root values" ms.assetid: 26e244e8-e82d-4664-a445-1226230ee1c5 caps.latest.revision: 37 author: edmacauley ms.author: edmaca manager: craigg monikerRange: ">= aps-pdw-2016 || = azuresqldb-current || = azure-sqldw-latest || >= sql-server-2016 || = sqlallproducts-allversions"
[!INCLUDEtsql-appliesto-ss2008-all-md]
Returns the square root of the specified float value.
Transact-SQL Syntax Conventions
SQRT ( float_expression )
float_expression
Is an expression of type float or of a type that can be implicitly converted to float.
float
The following example returns the square root of numbers between 1.00 and 10.00.
DECLARE @myvalue float;
SET @myvalue = 1.00;
WHILE @myvalue < 10.00
BEGIN
SELECT SQRT(@myvalue);
SET @myvalue = @myvalue + 1
END;
GO
[!INCLUDEssResult]
------------------------
1.0
------------------------
1.4142135623731
------------------------
1.73205080756888
------------------------
2.0
------------------------
2.23606797749979
------------------------
2.44948974278318
------------------------
2.64575131106459
------------------------
2.82842712474619
------------------------
3.0
The following example returns the square root of numbers 1.00 and 10.00.
SELECT SQRT(1.00), SQRT(10.00);
[!INCLUDEssResult]
---------- ------------
1.00 3.16