Now you could try it yourself:
--First, we create a inline-table function which returns a table
Create Function dbo.yukunFunctionTest (@param int, @param1 int)
returns table
AS
RETURN
(
select 1 as id
)
--Then, we want to alter it to a multi-statement table-valued function,
--and we will get an error here
alter Function dbo.yukunFunctionTest (@param int, @param1 int)
returns @tt table
(
id int
)
begin
insert into @tt values (1)
return
end
Create Function dbo.yukunFunctionTest (@param int, @param1 int)
returns table
AS
RETURN
(
select 1 as id
)
--Then, we want to alter it to a multi-statement table-valued function,
--and we will get an error here
alter Function dbo.yukunFunctionTest (@param int, @param1 int)
returns @tt table
(
id int
)
begin
insert into @tt values (1)
return
end
By the way, you can get the type value and type desc of any objects in your database from table sys.objects.
And, which is very important, if you really want to "alter" the type of your function, actually you need to drop it first, then create a new one. When you do it, pay attention to the permissions to the dropped objects, because you will lose all the permission info when you drop it, and you need to restore them after you create the new one.Bellow is a demo scripts which could do this for you:
select @grantee varchar(200)
select @grantee=name
from syspermissions p
join sysusers u on p.grantee = u.uid
where id = object_id('ObjectName')
grant select on dbo.ObjectName to @grantee
select @grantee=name
from syspermissions p
join sysusers u on p.grantee = u.uid
where id = object_id('ObjectName')
grant select on dbo.ObjectName to @grantee