Yaniv Mor


SQLServerCentral Article

Synchronising Databases in SSAS 2005

Planning for disaster recovery in SQL Server Analysis Services can be tricky. Fortunately SQL Server 2005 introduces the concept of a database synchronization, allowing you to transfer information and meta data from one server to another. Yaniv Mor brings us a look at this feature.

5 (2)

You rated this post out of 5. Change rating

2007-05-02

4,432 reads

SQLServerCentral Article

Enabling Query logging in SSAS 2005

Analysis Services 2005 seems like it receives much less notice than most of the other features in the latest version of SQL Server. However it is becoming more widely used in more and more companies. One of the features that can prove useful is the logging of queries. New author Yaniv Mor brings us a look at how this has changed in 2005.

You rated this post out of 5. Change rating

2006-05-16

8,567 reads

Blogs

Unlock the Power of Your Data: From Basic to Advanced Data Analysis

By

Data isn't just about numbers and spreadsheets. It holds stories, patterns, and the answers...

Attacking the Weakest Link

By

When I look at a system and think about its security model, the first...

Webinar – Microsoft Fabric for Dummies

By

On Wednesday May 15th 2024 I will give a free webinar on MSSQLTips.com about...

Read the latest Blogs

Forums

The "ORDER BY" clause behavior

By Alessandro Mortola

Comments posted to this topic are about the item The "ORDER BY" clause behavior

Are IT Certifications Still Relevant?

By Steve Jones - SSC Editor

Comments posted to this topic are about the item Are IT Certifications Still Relevant?

SQL-CTE reqursive query

By jjjohn

I have table TicketNumbers i     TicketNumber  UID 2    10                        09901a22c7c3acc6786847c775f1d113 6    5                          00dad28bef21f916240d6e8c1c1bd67d 12 ...

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