SQLServerCentral Article

Managing Jobs - Part 1

How many jobs do you have? 10? 100? 1000? Andy makes the point that what works to manage for a small number of jobs doesn't work when that number doubles or triples (well, unless you only had 1 job to start with!). In part one of two, this article looks at ideas for using categories and naming conventions to get things under control.

SQLServerCentral Article

Freeware: Terminator Opens Gigabyte Files Easily

Ever tried to open 1 Gig ASCII file with Notepad? WordPad? Do you remember ASCII codes of Tab and Carriage Return? Enter Terminator; huge ASCII file viewer and BCP helper. Terminator reads top 10 (and more if asked) records of ASCII file of any size. It detects record terminators and calculates current cursor position (field offset) and length of selected area (field length). Best of all, it's free!

Technical Article

How to move SQL Server from one computer to another?

Moving SQL Server from one computer to another is not a very difficult thing to do, but it often stumps newbie DBAs. Of course, it needs careful planning to ensure that the SQL Server is moved completely and properly to the new machine, and with a minimal downtime and no data loss. This article introduces you to a couple of methods you can employ to move/migrate SQL Server from one computer to another.

SQLServerCentral Article

Worst Practice - Bad Comments

This one is pretty interesting, Andy discusses a few things he sees in comments that not only fail to add value, they end up costing extra time. There's room for discussion here, but definitely a discussion worth having - comments can make you or break you, here's a chance to think about what you think is important in commenting and pass that on to your development team.

SQLServerCentral Article

How to Search for Date and Time Values

Because of the way date and time values are stored in SQL Server, searching for a particular date or time is not as straightforward as you might think it would be. This article describes how date/time values are stored, how the database design can simplify (or complicate) data retrieval, and how to query date/time data to get the right results every time.

Technical Article

Auditing Your SQL Server Environment Part I

This article is the first of a series that I plan on writing and placing on my website to help other DBAs in auditing a new SQL Server environment. This article deals with determing which SQL Server logins have weak passwords, with the definition of weak being, no password, password the same as the login name or having a password of only one character.The stored procedure used for this article is embedded in the article and it has been submitted as a independent script named spAuditPasswords.

Blogs

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...

Impactful Sessions I’ve Seen: T-SQL Tuesday #196

By

This month I’m thrilled that Steve Hughes is hosting. I’ve read this Data on...

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