• Hi Craig.

    I prefer Solomon but am not offended or upset when people use Sol as it is a common shortening.

    I sincerely apologize if my tone was unprofessional and/or harsh, especially with regards to the topics which are clearly opinion-based such as whether or not DBA's should use code that they are not familiar with.

    But I am not convinced that the statements of "performance and security problems" as well as ".NET is being replaced by HTML5 & JavaScript" are of opinion rather than something a bit more verifiable. Again, I apologize for my previous tone, but my main concern for these two topics is that many people make the claims of "performance and security problems" as reasons to not use or enable CLR in SQL Server but I have yet to see any evidence of them. And the HTML5/JavaScript statement caught me as it is the second time I have heard it but yet .NET is not analogous to those client-side technologies so it doesn't make much sense, unless being used over-generally to mean Silverlight, which would make more sense.

    Take care,

    Solomon...

    SQL#https://SQLsharp.com/ ( SQLCLR library ofover 340 Functions and Procedures)
    Sql Quantum Lifthttps://SqlQuantumLift.com/ ( company )
    Sql Quantum Leaphttps://SqlQuantumLeap.com/ ( blog )
    Info sitesCollations     •     Module Signing     •     SQLCLR