External Article

SQL Prompt Safety Net Features for SSMS: SQL History

Mistakes occasionally happen. Occasionally, you make some ill-judged 'refinements' to working code and now just wish you could rewind your tab back in time an hour and forget the whole sorry episode. Now and again, SSMS just conspires against you and crashes unexpectedly, and you lose all your currently open query tabs, some of which you hadn't saved. SQL History offers a useful safety net in the event of any of these unfortunate events.

External Article

Use DDL Triggers to Automatically Keep SQL Server Views in Sync

As much as we tell people to use SCHEMABINDING and avoid SELECT *, there is still a wide range of reasons people do not. A well-documented problem with SELECT * in views, specifically, is that the system caches the metadata about the view from the time the view was created, not when the view is queried. If the underlying table later changes, the view doesn't reflect the updated schema without refreshing, altering, or recreating the view. Wouldn't it be great if you could stop worrying about that scenario and have the system automatically keep the metadata in sync?

Blogs

JSON_OBJECTAGG is an Aggregate: #SQLNewBlogger

By

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

By

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

Beyond VARBINARY: How to Store PDFs in SQL Server Using FILESTREAM and FileTable

By

Hello, dear blog reader. Today’s post is coming to you straight from the home...

Read the latest Blogs

Forums

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?

Designing Database Changes Before Deployment: Level 1 of the Stairway to Reliable Database Deployments

By Massimo Preitano

Comments posted to this topic are about the item Designing Database Changes Before Deployment:...

Visit the forum

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