Thiago Zavaschi

Thiago is a DBA, Software Architect and Computer Scientist. He is currently doing a Masters degree in computer science, specifically in automated facial expression recognition. He's deploys a lot of Business Inteligence and High Availability solutions, as well as a lot of custom .NET applications (mainly web ERP applications). He is an MCT, MCTS (Web, SQL Server 2005/2008) and MCPD (Web Development), gives technical lectures, helps out in SQL Server and .NET communities, and also is a moderator at PowerPivot FAQ.

Blogs

From Planning to Practice: Setting Up Your FinOps Framework

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As someone who works in DevOps, I’m always focused on creating systems that are...

“We love to debate minutiae”

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I am guilty as charged. The quote was in reference to how people argue...

Advice I Like: Knots

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Learn how to tie a bowline knot. Practice in the dark. With one hand....

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Forums

Restoring On Top II

By Steve Jones - SSC Editor

Comments posted to this topic are about the item Restoring On Top II

SQL Art 2: St Patrick’s Day in SSMS (Shamrock + Pint + Pixel Text)

By Terry Jago

Comments posted to this topic are about the item SQL Art 2: St Patrick’s...

Breaking Down Your Work

By Steve Jones - SSC Editor

Comments posted to this topic are about the item Breaking Down Your Work

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Question of the Day

Restoring On Top II

I have a database, DNRTest, that has a number of tables and other objects in it. The other day, I was trying to mock up a test and ran this code on the same server:

-- run yesterday
CREATE DATABASE DNRTest2
GO
USE DNRTest2
GO
CREATE TABLE NewTable (id INT)
GO
Today, I realize that I need a copy of DNRTest for another mockup, and I run this:
-- run today
USE Master
BACKUP DATABASE DNRTest TO DISK = 'dnrtest.bak'
GO
RESTORE DATABASE DNRTest2 FROM DISK = 'dnrtest.bak' WITH REPLACE
What happens?

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