Additional Articles


External Article

T-SQL Window Function Speed Phreakery: The FIFO Stock Inventory Problem

Sometimes, in the quest for raw SQL performance, you are forced to sacrifice legibility and maintainability of your code, unless you then document your code lavishly. Phil Factor's SQL Speed Phreak challenge produced some memorable code, but can SQL features introduced since then help to produce code that performs as well and is also easy to understand? Kathi Kellenberger investigates.

2016-04-15

5,825 reads

Technical Article

What is Code Coverage For?

Code coverage is a practice that goes hand in hand with automated testing, reporting the percentage of your code that has been exercised during a test run. Ed Elliott and Redgate have partnered to make a code coverage tool available for SQL Server, both free and open source. SQL Cover measures the coverage of your SQL Server stored procedures and functions. It has built-in support for the popular tSQLt unit testing framework, but can also be used alongside any automated testing framework of your choosing. Find out more in this blog post.

You rated this post out of 5. Change rating

2016-04-14

4,457 reads

External Article

The Comeback of Migrations-Based Deployments

With database deployments, not all script-based processes are equal. Some use change scripts in a free-and-easy way, and some, which are normally called ‘migrations-based approaches’, have more discipline around them. In this article, Redgate Product Manager Elizabeth Ayer covers ‘migrations’, and shows some of the benefits that have come with new tooling which is specifically designed to assist the change script processes.

2016-04-08

3,078 reads

External Article

Exploring SQL Server 2016 Dynamic Data Masking – Part Two - Masking and Exporting Data in Existing Tables

Dynamic Data Masking allows you to obscure your confidential data column values at the database engine level for both new and existing SQL Server data. Being able to alter the definition of an existing column to add a masking rule makes it very simple to obscure your existing column values without even changing your application code.

2016-04-07

4,873 reads

Blogs

SQL Server Journey (Part 1)- Enterprise Database 2016

By

Continued thinking about my Journey blog where we have to look back at the...

Announcements from the Microsoft Fabric Community Conference

By

A ton of new features for Microsoft Fabric were announced at the Microsoft Fabric Community...

PowerShell Remoting for SQL DBAs: WinRM + SSH Guide (Updated 2026)

By

PowerShell Remoting for SQL DBAs: WinRM + SSH Guide (Updated 2026) ...

Read the latest Blogs

Forums

Identities and Sequences II

By Steve Jones - SSC Editor

Comments posted to this topic are about the item Identities and Sequences II

Using PostgreSQL as a NoSQL Store and a Search Engine

By sabyda

Comments posted to this topic are about the item Using PostgreSQL as a NoSQL...

Is Your Time "Free"?

By Steve Jones - SSC Editor

Comments posted to this topic are about the item Is Your Time "Free"?

Visit the forum

Question of the Day

Identities and Sequences II

In thinking about the differences between the identity property and a sequence object, which of these two guarantees that there are consecutive numbers (according to the increment) inserted in a single table?

See possible answers