Solution 1:

A CTE is basically a disposable view. It only persists for a single statement, and then automatically disappears.

Your options include:

  • Redefine the CTE a second time. This is as simple as copy-paste from WITH... through the end of the definition to before your SET.

  • Put your results into a #temp table or a @table variable

  • Materialize the results into a real table and reference that

  • Alter slightly to just SELECT COUNT from your CTE:

.

SELECT @total = COUNT(*)
FROM Players p 
INNER JOIN Teams t 
    ON p.IdTeam=t.Id 
INNER JOIN Leagues l 
    ON l.Id=t.IdLeague
WHERE l.Id=@idleague

Solution 2:

None of the above answers are correct... You can execute CTE once and achieve the result you want.. here is the query

ALTER PROCEDURE [dbo].[GetLeaguePlayers]
(
    @idleague int,
    @pageNumber int,
    @pageSize int,
    @total int OUTPUT
)
AS
WITH CTEPlayers AS
(
    SELECT p.Id, p.Name, t.Name AS Team
    FROM Players p INNER JOIN Teams t ON p.IdTeam=t.Id INNER JOIN Leagues l ON l.Id=t.IdLeague
    WHERE l.Id=@idleague
),
TotalCount AS
(
 SELECT COUNT(*) AS Total FROM CTEPlayers
),
Final_Result AS
(
 SELECT ROW_NUMBER() OVER (ORDER BY p.Name) AS RowNumber, p.Id, p.Name, t.Name AS Team,
  (SELECT Total FROM TotalCount) AS Total
    FROM CTEPlayers
)
SELECT Id, Name, @total = Total
FROM Final_Results c
WHERE RowNumber>@pageSize*(@pageNumber-1) AND RowNumber<@pageSize*@pageNumber;

Solution 3:

A CTE is, per definition, only valid for one statement.

You can create an inline table-valued function and then use this as often as you like. The inline function does what the name suggest; its query gets to be part of the query using it (in contrast to non-inline functions which are executed separately and used as a rowset).