External Article

Making your SQL Server database changes backward compatible: Adding a new column

As multi-tier architectures grow over time, it is often challenging to coordinate those changes across the data, logic and presentation tiers. Unless planned and implemented carefully, an act as simple as adding a column to a table can grind all of the components of your application to a halt. While some of us have comfortable 12-hour maintenance windows every weekend, many of us are bound by service level agreements that are much more strict. So we must find ways to introduce fixes and new features with zero downtime, and without requiring every single component to be refactored at the same time.

Blogs

Data Engineering Books Worth Having on Your Shelf (or your tablet)

By

Good documentation gets you started. Good books get you deep. After years of working...

SSMS Evaluation – future ready

By

In previous posts, we looked at the SQL Server engine. for us DBAs, the...

Claude.ai vs Claude API

By

You have used Claude. But which Claude? The Claude app (claude.ai, the desktop and...

Read the latest Blogs

Forums

Creating a JSON Document IV

By Steve Jones - SSC Editor

Comments posted to this topic are about the item Creating a JSON Document IV

Permissions Removal When Changing Object Schema

By Brandie Tarvin

When the schema of an object is changed, SQL Server wipes out the previous...

Visit the forum

Question of the Day

Creating a JSON Document IV

I have this data in a table called dbo.NFLTeams

TeamID  TeamName       City             YearEstablished
------  --------       ----             ---------------
1       Cowboys        Dallas           1960
2       Eagles         Philadelphia     1933
3       Packers        Green Bay        1919
4       Chiefs         Kansas City      1960
5       49ers          San Francisco    1946
6       Broncos        Denver           1960
7       Seahawks       Seattle          1976
8       Patriots       New England      1960
If I run this code, how many rows are returned?
SELECT 
  YearEstablished,
  json_objectagg(city : TeamName)
FROM dbo.NFLTeams
GROUP BY  YearEstablished;

See possible answers