2007-07-17
1,783 reads
2007-07-17
1,783 reads
Quite a few complaints on the QOD section from last week, mostly justified. A couple I had to defend, which...
2007-07-16
1,584 reads
2007-07-16
1,495 reads
I'm not big on beta testing, or at least haven't been for a number of
years because I can't afford the...
2007-07-13
1,381 reads
2007-07-13
1,522 reads
2007-07-12
1,807 reads
It's interesting being at a software company, especially one that's
building on another platform. I've never done this before, having
worked for...
2007-07-12
1,406 reads
It's been almost three years since SQL Server 2005 was released and Steve Jones current recommendation is that you don't upgrade right now. Read on to see why he's giving this advice.
2007-07-11
23,695 reads
Lots of debate and disagreement on my recommendation to wait for SQL
Server 2008 instead of upgrading to SQL Server 2005...
2007-07-11
1,440 reads
2007-07-11
1,387 reads
One feature that I have been waiting for years! The new announcement around optimize...
Following on from my last post about Getting Started With KubeVirt & SQL Server,...
By DesertDBA
I haven’t posted in a while (well, not here at least since I’ve been...
Comments posted to this topic are about the item Refactoring SQL Code, which is...
Comments posted to this topic are about the item The Read Committed Snapshot Isolation...
Comments posted to this topic are about the item Working with JSON/JSONB Data in...
I am currently working with Sql Server 2022 and AdventureWorks database. First of all, let's set the "Read Committed Snapshot" to ON:
use master; go alter database AdventureWorks set read_committed_snapshot on with no_wait; goThen, from Session 1, I execute the following code:
--Session 1 use AdventureWorks; go create table ##t1 (id int, f1 varchar(10)); go insert into ##t1 values (1, 'A');From another session, called Session 2, I open a transaction and execute the following update:
--Session 2 use AdventureWorks; go begin tran; update ##t1 set f1 = 'B' where id = 1;Now, going back to Session 1, what happens if I execute this statement?
--Session 1 select f1 from ##t1 where id = 1;See possible answers