SQLServerCentral Editorial

The Train to Katmai

We don't have a release date, the final feature set has yet to be released, but slowly I can see the train building steam. This week I found a number of blogs starting to look at various aspects of SQL Server 2008. If you look through the newsletter, you'll see coverage of data compression, clustering […]

Technical Article

Write custom trace files in TSQL

SQL Server 2005's default trace is great for monitoring system information and for finding out what happened on your server after problems occur. However, there are times when the events that the default captures are not what you need. Here are instructions for how you can create your own trace files in TSQL to catch events on your database machine.

Blogs

Fabric Mirroring doesn’t start copying Rows

By

A short blog post about an issue with Fabric Mirroring (with Azure SQL DB...

JSON_OBJECTAGG is an Aggregate: #SQLNewBlogger

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I wrote an article recently on the JSON_OBJECTAGG function, but neglected to include an...

Cultural Change: Fostering a Cost-Aware Culture in Your Organisation

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After working deep in cloud operations, I’ve learned that FinOps isn’t really about dashboards...

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Forums

Breaking SQL Server for disaster recovery practice

By chapwolff

Hey all. I understand if this gets taken down due to the subject matter...

Creating a JSON Document I

By Steve Jones - SSC Editor

Comments posted to this topic are about the item Creating a JSON Document I

Who is Irresponsible?

By Steve Jones - SSC Editor

Comments posted to this topic are about the item Who is Irresponsible?

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Question of the Day

Creating a JSON Document I

I want to create a JSON document that contains data from this table:

TeamID  TeamName  City          YearEstablished
1       Cowboys   Dallas        1960
2       Eagles  Philadelphia  1933
If I run this code, what is returned?
SELECT json_objectagg('Team' : TeamName)
FROM dbo.NFLTeams;

See possible answers