External Article

One use case for NOT using schema prefixes

I’ve long been a huge advocate for always referencing objects with a schema prefix in SQL Server.

In spite of what may be a controversial title to many of my regular blog readers, I don’t really want you to stop that practice in most of your T-SQL code, because the schema prefix is important and useful most of the time. At Stack Overflow, though, there is a very specific pattern we use where not specifying the schema is beneficial.

Blogs

PowerShell Remoting for SQL DBAs: WinRM + SSH Guide (Updated 2026)

By

PowerShell Remoting for SQL DBAs: WinRM + SSH Guide (Updated 2026) ...

The 2026 Redgate Summit in New York City

By

We’re coming back to New York, which is exciting for me. I love NYC....

Monitoring Fabric Mirroring for SQL 2025

By

I previously wrote about how the underlying technology for Fabric mirroring changed with SQL...

Read the latest Blogs

Forums

Why SQL Server Orphaned Users Cause Login Failures

By navyasingh

SQL Server Orphaned Users often appear after restoring or migrating a database to another...

Seeding a Fabric Warehouse with dbt for Visual Studio Code: The Fabric Modern Data Platform

By John Miner

Comments posted to this topic are about the item Seeding a Fabric Warehouse with...

Seeding a Fabric Warehouse with dbt for Visual Studio Code: The Fabric Modern Data Platform

By Steve Jones - SSC Editor

Comments posted to this topic are about the item Seeding a Fabric Warehouse with...

Visit the forum

Question of the Day

Historical Data Tracking

If I want to track historical data values, which mechanism should I use?

See possible answers