External Article

Introducing the MySQL INSERT statement

In the previous article in this series, I introduced you to the SELECT statement, one of several SQL statements that fall into the category of data manipulation language (DML), a subset of statements used to query and modify data. Another DML statement is the INSERT statement, which lets you add data to MySQL tables, both permanent and temporary. This article covers the INSERT statement and the different ways you can use it to add data.

SQLServerCentral Editorial

Friendship and Your Career

PASS Data Community Summit is coming up like an out of control freight train. Another couple of weeks and it'll be here. I'm excited about it every year and I really hope to see you there. Please, consider this a personal invite to say hi if you see me around. I'm bringing all this up […]

Blogs

Advice I Like: Rewards from Work

By

The greatest rewards come from working on something that nobody has words for. If...

Overcoming Challenges: Navigating Common Pitfalls in FinOps Adoption

By

Working in DevOps, I’ve seen FinOps do amazing things for cloud cost control, but...

Why your data still can’t answer a simple question 

By

Every organization I talk to has the same problem dressed up in different clothes....

Read the latest Blogs

Forums

The day-to-day pressures of a DBA team, and how we can work smarter with automation and AI

By Terry Jago

Comments posted to this topic are about the item The day-to-day pressures of a...

Don't Panic

By Grant Fritchey

Comments posted to this topic are about the item Don't Panic

Creating a Simple and Flexible Random Password Generator in SQL Server

By john.martin

Comments posted to this topic are about the item Creating a Simple and Flexible...

Visit the forum

Question of the Day

Identities and Sequences IV

When thinking about the identity property and sequence objects, which of these can be used with numeric and decimal data types?

See possible answers