• Actually that's a distribution I would expect. this is a trivia question/answer, and unless you'd read Henrik's article the other day, it would be easy to have 1024, a logical number, or 30,000 stick in your head.

    30,000 has been thrown around a lot as its' the limit for sparse columns, someone might remember reading that.

    1024, lots of 1024 limits in computing.

    32 nesting levels in a trigger, might get confused, but that seems like a low, albeit more practical to read, number of tables in a trigger.

    You can google if you want for answers, but it somewhat defeats the idea. You know it or you don't. If you google, then you are semi-cheating yourself on the score.