External Article

HOWTO: Run Singleton SELECT Queries in a Visual Basic Client

This article demonstrates how to retrieve a single record from SQL Server by using the IRow interface with a singleton SELECT. The main purpose for this technique is to avoid the overhead of creating a recordset when you are fetching a single record. Because no recordset is actually created, only one read-only ADODB.Record is returned. This is true even if the specified SELECT results in multiple records being returned if a normal ADODB.Recordset is used.

Technical Article

SQL Server 2000 Replication Chat Hosted by PASS Today

SQL Server 2000 has better replication capabilities than ever before! Do you have questions about using Replication on SQL Server? Whether it be transactional or merge replication, you can not find a better group of guys to answer your questions. Right from the development team, Matt Hollingsworth and Dean Kalanquin, replication program manager and test lead respectively are setting aside this time to take on your most challenging replication questions!

Blogs

5 Starter Projects for Your AI and Data Engineering Portfolio

By

Reading tutorials is fine. Shipping something is better. If you are trying to break...

The Book of Redgate: Taking Breaks

By

We work hard at Redgate, though with a good work-life balance. One interesting observation...

Database AI Agents: The Read-Only Rule

By

Fourth in a series on Ai and databases. What Read-Only Advisory Actually Means A...

Read the latest Blogs

Forums

Displaying Money

By Steve Jones - SSC Editor

Comments posted to this topic are about the item Displaying Money

The Slow Growing Problems

By Steve Jones - SSC Editor

Comments posted to this topic are about the item The Slow Growing Problems

Calculating the Harmonic Mean in Power BI

By Dinesh Asanka

Comments posted to this topic are about the item Calculating the Harmonic Mean in...

Visit the forum

Question of the Day

Displaying Money

I want to get the currency sign displayed with my amount stored in a money type. Does this work?

DECLARE @Amount MONEY;
SET @Amount = '?1500';

SELECT CAST( @Amount  AS VARCHAR(30)) AS Euros

See possible answers