SQLServerCentral Article

T-SQL Challenge #1

Do you want to improve your T-SQL skills? MVP Jacob Sebastian runs regular challenges to get you to think about how to solve a problem in T-SQL. These run monthly and we have a summary and explanation from challenge #1 to help you learn more about moving data from 3 tables into a specific format.

External Article

Disaster Recovery for SQL Server Databases

High-Availability depends on how quickly you can recover a production system after an incident that has caused a failure. This requires planning, and documentation. If you get a Disaster Recovery Plan wrong, it can make an incident into a catastrophe for the business. Hugo Shebbeare discusses some essentials, describes a typical system, and provides sample documentation.

Blogs

5 Starter Projects for Your AI and Data Engineering Portfolio

By

Reading tutorials is fine. Shipping something is better. If you are trying to break...

The Book of Redgate: Taking Breaks

By

We work hard at Redgate, though with a good work-life balance. One interesting observation...

Database AI Agents: The Read-Only Rule

By

Fourth in a series on Ai and databases. What Read-Only Advisory Actually Means A...

Read the latest Blogs

Forums

Liability for AI Errors

By Steve Jones - SSC Editor

Comments posted to this topic are about the item Liability for AI Errors

Running a Parameter-Sensitive Stored Procedure on a Secondary Replica

By abdalah.mehdoini

Hello , I would like to run a stored procedure on a secondary replica...

Pro SQL Server Internals

By Site Owners

Comments posted to this topic are about the item Pro SQL Server Internals

Visit the forum

Question of the Day

Running SQLCMD II

I run this command to start SQLCMD:

sqlcmd -S localhost -E -c "proceed"
At the prompt, I type this (the 1> and 2> are prompts):
1> select @@version
2> go
What happens?

See possible answers