SQLServerCentral Editorial

Mining or Profiling

The more data you have, the better you should be able to predict something. Or at least that's one of the things that I learned while studying economics. If we could actually gather enough data about someone or some system, we could determine what the most likely outputs of the system will be. In the […]

SQLServerCentral Article

Output Parameters

Regular columnist Robert Marda writes about the basics of using output parameters. If you're not using output params we hope this article will get you started - they are a great way to return less data to the client, perfect if you need only a few values and not a recordset/resultset.

SQLServerCentral Editorial

What's Fair

If you read my recent editorial called Get Some Help, you realize that I didn't get any World Series tickets from the sale on the Colorado Rockie's web site. Not to berate the subject, but some friends and I had an interesting debate on how the situation was handled and what could be done differently.

Blogs

Reality (And Limits) of Instant File Initialization for Transaction Logs in SQL Server 2022

By

Reality (And Limits) of Instant File Initialization for Transaction Logs in SQL Server 2022 ...

Looking Back at the Redgate 2026 Company Kickoff

By

Last week I spent a few days in Cambridge, UK for the Redgate Company...

Using AI for Git Hooks

By

Recently I had someone internally ask about whether SQL Source Control supports Git Hooks....

Read the latest Blogs

Forums

SQL Agent job running gMSA cannot backup to NAS target

By DataMatt43

I'm running a group MSA for the database engine and SQL Agent in a...

sys.query_store_query question

By as_1234

All, My query is as follows: SET DATEFORMAT dmy SELECT p.query_id, DATEADD(MICROSECOND,-rs.max_duration,rs.first_execution_time) AS starttime,...

Encoding Strings

By Steve Jones - SSC Editor

Comments posted to this topic are about the item Encoding Strings

Visit the forum

Question of the Day

Encoding Strings

I have this code in SQL Server 2025. What is the result?

DECLARE @message VARCHAR(50) = 'Hello SQL Server 2025!';
DECLARE @encoded VARCHAR(MAX);

SET @encoded = BASE64_ENCODE(@message);
SELECT @encoded AS EncodedResult;

See possible answers