External Article

Modifying Microsoft Access Linked Tables from SQL Server

In a previous tip we saw how easy it was to link to SQL Server tables from Microsoft Access. As is the case with all systems, how does Access manage the changes? What happens when you modify the structure of the underlying SQL Server table? What happens to the SQL Server table if you delete the linked table in Access? We will look at each of these situations in this tip.

SQLServerCentral Editorial

The CLR

The CLR was one of the highly touted additions to SQL Server 2005, and one of the reasons for its long development cycle. Steve Jones comments on why it hasn't been that widely used.

Blogs

Houston AI-Lytics 2026–Powerpoint Slides

By

Thanks to everyone for attending my session on running a Local LLM. If you...

The Book of Redgate: Do the Right Things

By

I do believe that Redgate has been very customer focused since it’s inception. I’ve...

GenAI vs Dashboards: Not the Same (And Never Will Be)

By

There’s a question I’ve been hearing more and more lately, especially as Copilot, Fabric,...

Read the latest Blogs

Forums

Warning: Could not open global shared memory to communicate with performance DLL

By water490

Hi everyone I am getting below warning when I run SSIS: Warning: 0x80049304 at...

Let's Talk Community Events!

By Pat Wright

Comments posted to this topic are about the item Let's Talk Community Events!

that one limitation in replication

By stan

Hi as shown below a replication target requires a primary key.  if we want...

Visit the forum

Question of the Day

Detecting Deadlocks

By default, how often is the SQL Server Database Engine checking for deadlocks?

See possible answers