Technical Article

SPLIT function

This is a port of the SPLIT function from Perl (or VBScript). It works the same way: pass a string anda separator, up to 4 characters long (you can change this),and the function returns a table with the elements.This version trims leading and trailling spaces of the elements, just for convenience.Example:SELECT    strvalFROM    master.dbo.SPLIT('a and b', […]

5 (1)

You rated this post out of 5. Change rating

2003-06-13

209 reads

Technical Article

Port from Oracle's TRANSLATE Function

Here is a port from the Oracle's TRANSLATE function to T-SQL. It gets three arguments: a string to be searched, a string with a set of characters to be found and replaced, and another set of characters as the replacements. Example: SELECT dbo.TRANSLATE('ABCDE', 'BD', 'CE') It will return 'ACCEE'.

3 (2)

You rated this post out of 5. Change rating

2002-01-03

469 reads

Blogs

Redgate Summit Comes to the Windy City

By

I love Chicago. I went to visit three times in 2023: a Redgate event,...

Non-Functional Requirements

By

I have found that non-functional requirements (NFRs) can be hard to define for a...

Techorama 2024 – Slides

By

You can find the slidedeck for my Techorama session “Microsoft Fabric for Dummies” on...

Read the latest Blogs

Forums

Clear Trace - Asking for SQL Server 2008

By rameshbabu.chejarla

Hi, I have SQL Server 2019 installed and when go the Clear Trace database...

get all txt files $filenameAndPath = code please help

By juliava

Hello I need to get txt files from directory and send email, when I...

Always on Availability groups cluster question

By GreatPancake

Hello, I have a question regarding Availability group server architecture. A little background: We...

Visit the forum

Question of the Day

The "ORDER BY" clause behavior

Let’s consider the following script that can be executed without any error on both SQL Sever and PostgreSQL. We define the table t1 in which we insert three records:

create table t1 (id int primary key, city varchar(50));

insert into t1 values (1, 'Rome'), (2, 'New York'), (3, NULL);
If we execute the following query, how will the records be sorted in both environments?
select city

from t1

order by city;

See possible answers