Technical Article

Comprehensive HTML Database Documentation

This script will document tables (including constraints and triggers, row counts, sizes on disk), views (including all used fields), stored procedures (including used fields and parameters), database users, database settings and server settings.This script has been cobbled together from several others found on this site, so they deserve the recognition, not me 🙂Simply execute it […]

You rated this post out of 5. Change rating

2003-12-05

659 reads

Blogs

Spark Connect Dotnet Variant Data Type

By

All Spark Connect Posts I recently published the latest version of the Spark Connect Dotnet...

A New Word: Opia

By

opia – n. the ambiguous intensity of eye contact The entry for this says...

Friday Flyway Tips: Searching a Migration

By

This was actually a cool tip I saw internally from one of the product...

Read the latest Blogs

Forums

Table Partitioning SQL server 2022

By Saran

Hi All, I am currently testing the Table Partitioning to implement in SQL server...

STRING_AGG's behavior

By Alessandro Mortola

Comments posted to this topic are about the item STRING_AGG's behavior

The Role of Databases in the Era of AI

By Steve Jones - SSC Editor

Comments posted to this topic are about the item The Role of Databases in...

Visit the forum

Question of the Day

STRING_AGG's behavior

Executing the following script (Sql Server 2022), you get the table t0 with 10 rows:
CREATE TABLE t0
( id     INT PRIMARY KEY
, field1 VARCHAR(1000)
, field2 VARCHAR(MAX));
INSERT INTO t0
SELECT
  gs.value
, REPLICATE ('X', 1000)
, REPLICATE ('Y', 1000)
FROM generate_series(1, 10, 1) gs;
GO
What happens if you execute the following statements?
  1. select STRING_AGG(field1, ';') within group (order by id)  from t0;
  2. select STRING_AGG(field2, ';') within group (order by id)  from t0;

See possible answers