2025-12-29 (first published: 2025-12-25)
335 reads
2025-12-29 (first published: 2025-12-25)
335 reads
This script will save your database permissions into a table.
2025-12-29
256 reads
This script is used to generate the output file as CSV format for list of server.
2025-11-03 (first published: 2025-10-20)
787 reads
The script gets the database health check whether synchronized or not from the primary or secondary. This code needs to scheduled through as a job to get alerts.
2025-10-20 (first published: 2025-10-13)
623 reads
Get a list of all user permissions in a database
2025-10-15 (first published: 2025-10-13)
2,072 reads
A T-SQL script to track and monitor the growth of your SQL Server Databases.
2025-09-12 (first published: 2025-09-04)
862 reads
This script will help DBAs to find inefficient indexes and duplicate indexes, by providing the following metrics: usage statistics, fragmentation levels, size, and index duplication analysis.
2025-09-10 (first published: 2025-06-27)
767 reads
This script loops through all user databases, skips system DBs and any you want to exclude, and enables CDC if it’s not already enabled.
2025-09-05 (first published: 2025-08-25)
704 reads
This script automatically generates comprehensive schema documentation that can be easily consumed by AI services for natural language querying, automated report generation, and intelligent data analysis.
2025-09-03 (first published: 2025-08-25)
1,196 reads
COALESCE smartly helps to concatenating the multiple rows value into one cell.
2025-09-01 (first published: 2025-08-25)
1,578 reads
If you've ever loaded a 2 GB CSV into pandas just to run a...
By James Serra
What problem is Fabric Ontology trying to solve? For years, most data conversations have...
By Steve Jones
Recently I ran across some code that used a lot of QUOTENAME() calls. A...
Comments posted to this topic are about the item The New Software Team
Comments posted to this topic are about the item Database Mail in SQL Server...
Comments posted to this topic are about the item The string_agg function
We create the following table and then insert some records in it:
create table t1 ( id int primary key, category char(1) not null, product varchar(50) ); insert into t1 values (1, 'A', 'Product 1'), (2, 'A', 'Product 2'), (3, 'A', 'Product 3'), (4, 'B', 'Product 4'), (5, 'B', 'Product 5');What happens if we execute the following query in both Sql Server and PostgreSQL?
select id,
category,
string_agg(product, ';')
over (partition by category order by id
rows between unbounded preceding and unbounded following) as stragg
from t1; See possible answers