Who Built This Thing?
Do the people that build SQL Server really work with it? Steve Jones shares a short story from a recent trip to the Pacific Northwest.
Do the people that build SQL Server really work with it? Steve Jones shares a short story from a recent trip to the Pacific Northwest.
Do the people that build SQL Server really work with it? Steve Jones shares a short story from a recent trip to the Pacific Northwest.
How can you find good employees? Steve Jones offers a few tips on what has worked for him in the past.
How can you find good employees? Steve Jones offers a few tips on what has worked for him in the past.
How can you find good employees? Steve Jones offers a few tips on what has worked for him in the past.
Steve Jones looks at the performance of column changes, petaflop computing, and a few ways to beef up your DBA skills.
Steve Jones looks at the performance of column changes, petaflop computing, and a few ways to beef up your DBA skills.
Steve Jones talks about two competing priorities for many people that start at a new job and asks which one you value more in this Friday poll.
One of the very common questions posted about T-SQL is how to traverse a hierarchy in a set based manner. New author Craig Hatley brings us his techniques for handling the common scenario of employees and managers.
How many of you have written resursive queries in SQL? Or any language since school for that matter? Not many people write recusrive queries because of the complexity, the difficulty to understand how they work, and the chance for heap overflows. However, SQL Server 2005 implements Common Table Expressions and recursion in a way that is much easier to code and incorporates some safeguards. New author SQL Server MVP Frederic Brouard has written a fantastic article looking at resursive queries.
By Brian Kelley
If you want to learn better, pause more in your learning to intentionally review.
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By DataOnWheels
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Comments posted to this topic are about the item Faster Data Engineering with Python...
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I have this code in SQL Server 2022:
CREATE SCHEMA etl;
GO
CREATE TABLE etl.product
(
ProductID INT,
ProductName VARCHAR(100)
);
GO
INSERT etl.product
VALUES
(2, 'Bee AI Wearable');
GO
CREATE TABLE dbo.product
(
ProductID INT,
ProductName VARCHAR(100)
);
GO
INSERT dbo.product
VALUES
(1, 'Spiral College-ruled Notebook');
GO
CREATE OR ALTER PROCEDURE etl.GettheProduct
AS
BEGIN
exec('SELECT ProductName FROM product;')
END;
GO
When I execute this code as a user whose default schema is dbo and has rights to the tables and proc, what is returned? See possible answers