SQLServerCentral Editorial

Get Some Help

The vast majority of us never work on high volume systems. And I mean high volume systems, like backing a web server that gets millions of hits in a few minutes, which might result in tens of millions of database queries in the same amount of time.

External Article

Working with Time Spans and Durations in SQL Server

What is the best way to return the "duration" of an event in SQL, given the start and end datetime values? How can we add up these durations to return grand totals? What data types should be used to return this data to our clients? How do we handle overflows, such as when hours go over 23 or minutes total up to over 59? Are there any T-SQL functions or other techniques that are useful in these scenarios?

Blogs

Questions and Answers from Running a Local LLM

By

I had a few random questions from my Running a Local LLM on Your...

Overview of Claude AI Models: Which One to Choose?

By

For those entering the AI space whether professionally or personally I wanted to give...

Houston AI-Lytics 2026–Powerpoint Slides

By

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

Read the latest Blogs

Forums

SSIS package failing intermittently on last Excel Component

By Reh23

Good Afternoon, I have a Job which "fires" off an SSIS package (that is...

T-SQL in SQL Server 2025: JSON_ARRAYAGG

By Steve Jones - SSC Editor

Comments posted to this topic are about the item T-SQL in SQL Server 2025:...

Spring Connections and Learning at PASS On Tour

By Steve Jones - SSC Editor

Comments posted to this topic are about the item Spring Connections and Learning at...

Visit the forum

Question of the Day

Multiple Sequence Values

How do I easily get the next 12 sequence values from a sequence object?

See possible answers